The Office for National Statistics confirmed this morning what traders had feared for weeks. Gross domestic product fell 0.4% in the third quarter, a sharper contraction than the 0.2% forecast. The culprit is clear. The escalation of hostilities in the Middle East has sent a jolt through global supply chains and energy markets, and the UK, already fragile, has taken the blow squarely on the chin.
Brent crude has surged past $95 a barrel. That is a 15% increase since the start of the month. For a net importer of energy, this is a tax on every business and household. Manufacturing output fell 1.2%, the worst reading in over a year. The services sector, which had been the economy's crutch, also buckled. Retail sales volumes dropped as higher petrol prices ate into disposable income.
The gilt market reacted with the predictable flight to safety. The 10-year yield fell 12 basis points to 4.02%, as investors scrambled for the relative sanctuary of government debt. But this is not a vote of confidence in UK fiscal management. It is a panic move. The yield curve remains inverted, a screaming signal that recession is the base case.
Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, issued a statement saying the government is “working with international partners to stabilise the situation.” That is boilerplate. The truth is that the Treasury has no fiscal headroom. With borrowing costs elevated and debt above 100% of GDP, the buffers are gone. Any attempt at a stimulus package would be met with a hostile bond market. The days of cheap money are over.
Meanwhile, sterling has taken a hit. The pound fell to $1.27 against the dollar, a three-month low. Currency traders are pricing in a higher risk premium. Capital flight is becoming a concern. If investors lose faith in the UK's ability to navigate this crisis, we could see a repeat of the 2022 gilt crisis. That would force the Bank of England to choose between raising rates to defend the currency or cutting them to support growth. A lose-lose scenario.
The Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee meets next week. The hawks will argue that inflation, still at 4.5%, does not allow for rate cuts. The doves will point to the collapsing economy. My bet is on a hold. But the real action is in the secondary effects. The Iran conflict has disrupted shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, raising the cost of imported goods. Core inflation could remain sticky even as demand evaporates. Stagflation, the nastiest word in the economic lexicon, is back in play.
For investors, the message is clear. Reduce exposure to cyclical stocks. Defensive sectors like utilities and healthcare may offer some shelter. But the overarching theme is uncertainty. The market hates nothing more than unpredictability. Geopolitical risk premiums are being repriced across the board. It is a time for cash and caution, not heroics.
The bottom line: the UK economy is contracting not because of domestic policy failures alone, but because the world has become a more dangerous place. Fiscal responsibility, central bank credibility, and market efficiency are the only anchors we have left. And they are being tested to the limit.








