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Sterling pulls back as Iran war sees investors flock to safe havens

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on March 6, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: April 1, 2026

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Sterling pulls back as Iran war sees investors flock to safe havens
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By Sophie Kiderlin LONDON, March 6 (Reuters) - The British pound slipped for a second straight session on Friday as the widening Iran conflict dominated market sentiment and pushed investors towards

Sterling Weakens as Investors Flee to Safe Havens Amid Iran Conflict

By Sophie Kiderlin

Market Reactions to the Iran Conflict and Impact on Sterling

Sterling Performance and Investor Sentiment

LONDON, March 6 (Reuters) - The British pound slipped for a second straight session on Friday as the widening Iran conflict dominated market sentiment and pushed investors towards safe-haven assets.

Sterling was last down 0.15% against the dollar to $1.3335 on the day, and set for a weekly decline of around 1.1%. Against the euro, the pound was broadly steady at around 86.83 pence, with the euro also trading lower against the dollar which has strengthened amid the Middle East crisis. 

Escalation of Conflict and Market Uncertainty

Hopes for a de-escalation faded this week as attacks persisted and the conflict broadened, raising uncertainty about how long the crisis could last.

Economic Implications for the UK

Inflation Concerns and Oil Prices

Rising oil prices have fuelled inflation worries, particularly for energy-importing countries such as the UK, and have prompted a shift in interest rate expectations.

Bank of England's Policy Outlook

The Bank of England, due to announce its latest interest rate decision later this month, is now no longer expected to cut policy then. Markets have pared back chances of a March cut to just 15%, down from roughly 75% a week ago, according to LSEG data. 

Market Expectations for Rate Cuts

Traders were last pricing in an around 65% chance of a rate cut by the end of the year, after still expecting two cuts from the Bank of England this year at the end of February. 

Expert Commentary

"Given the uncertainty from what's happening in the Middle East, it makes more sense for the Bank of England to kind of just keep rates on hold and assess how the situation in the Middle East plays out before cutting," Hardman said.

Rate-cut expectations being pushed back could support the pound, he added.

"But in terms of the bigger picture, obviously the energy price shock is a bigger negative for the pound, really and I think that would outweigh any support for the pound from the Bank of England holding back on cutting rates this month," he said. 

Bond Yields and Broader Market Impact

The yield on British government bonds picked up again Friday, with interest-rate expectation sensitive 2-year gilt yields last trading roughly 9 basis points higher at 3.894% after hitting their highest level since mid-October earlier in the day.

(Reporting by Sophie Kiderlin, Editing by Louise Heavens)

Key Takeaways

  • The widening Iran war and heightened geopolitical risk are pushing investors into safe‐haven assets, weakening the pound
  • Oil prices have spiked—due to disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz and a drone attack on Aramco’s Ras Tanura refinery—boosting inflation concerns in the UK (en.wikipedia.org)
  • Markets have sharply downgraded the likelihood of a BoE rate cut this month—probability fell from ~75% to ~15–22%—while two‑year gilt yields have jumped amid elevated rate uncertainty (globalbankingandfinance.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the British pound fall amid the Iran conflict?
The British pound slipped as investors flocked to safe-haven assets due to uncertainty and escalating tensions in the Middle East.
How has the Iran conflict affected UK interest rate expectations?
Expectations for a Bank of England rate cut in March dropped from 75% to 15%, with markets now anticipating a cut later in the year.
What impact did rising oil prices have on the UK economy?
Rising oil prices have fuelled inflation worries, especially for energy-importing countries like the UK, impacting market sentiment and interest rate decisions.
How did the British government bond yields react?
Yields on UK 2-year gilts rose, reflecting changes in rate cut expectations and investor sentiment amid ongoing conflict.
What could support or weigh on the pound going forward?
Delaying rate cuts could support the pound, but energy price shocks and inflation concerns may have a stronger negative impact.

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