24.03.2026

Energy Shock, Rising Rates and What UK Business Owners Must Do Now

Energy Shock, Rising Rates and What UK Business…

twitter icon

In the week ending 22 March 2026, UK gilt yields hit 5.0% — the highest since 2008 — as the Middle East conflict escalated further, the Bank of England revised its Q3 inflation forecast to 3.5%, and the FTSE 100 fell through 10,000. Here is what every UK business owner needs to understand.

Five observations every business owner should internalise

  •  Iran retains significant offensive capacity. Despite four weeks of bombardment, strikes on Ras Laffan prove Iran can still inflict severe economic pain on global energy markets.
  • Inflation is locked in regardless of a ceasefire. The BoE's 3.5% Q3 forecast predates the Qatar strikes. The real figure may well be higher.
  • UK gilts are the sharp end of the global bond sell-off. Britain's import-gas dependency amplifies inflation risk more than any other G7 economy. Ten-year yields at 5.0% have direct implications for pension liabilities, LDI positions, and refinancing decisions.
  • Government support will be more constrained than in 2022–23. The £40bn+ energy subsidy bill from that episode cannot be repeated at today's debt levels and borrowing costs.
  • The energy price cap could rise 20% in July. Cornwall Insight's warning is a demand-side signal: real disposable incomes will compress further through summer, deferring the consumer recovery.

"The gravest energy shock of all time" — Fatih Birol, Head of the International Energy Agency, March 2026 What small business owners should do this week

  • Check your energy contract. If you are on a variable tariff, call your supplier now. The price cap is forecast to rise around 20% in July. Locking in a fixed rate today — even at a small premium — may well protect your cash flow through the summer months.
  • Review any variable-rate borrowing. Business loans, overdrafts and credit lines tied to the base rate are set to become more expensive. Know your monthly exposure if rates rise by 0.75% and speak to your bank early if headroom is tight — before it becomes urgent.
  • Build a conservative sales scenario for Q3. Rising energy bills will squeeze household budgets from July. If your revenue is consumer-facing, model a softer trading quarter now rather than be caught off guard when customers pull back.
  • Ask your suppliers about lead times. The IEA warns it could take six months or longer to restore Gulf shipping lanes. If any of your stock, components or materials move through the Middle East or Asia, find out now whether delays are coming and whether you need to hold more buffer stock.
  • Protect your cash buffer. This is not the moment to run lean on working capital. Aim for at least eight to twelve weeks of operating costs in accessible cash or an undrawn facility. If you are not there yet, start building it.
  •  Review your pricing before summer. If your input costs are rising — energy, freight, materials — revisit what you charge now. A modest, well-communicated increase absorbed early does far less damage to customer relationships than a larger one imposed under pressure.

The outlook The base case — uncomfortable but not catastrophic — points to UK GDP of around 0.5% for 2026, with CPI peaking near 3.5% in Q3 before easing. The greater risk is a prolonged conflict keeping energy prices elevated into summer, triggering second-round inflation effects and forcing the Bank of England's hand on rates. In that scenario, the combination of 5%+ borrowing costs, a 20% energy cap rise, and compressed consumer spending becomes considerably more damaging. Plan for the downside. Don't let worst-case anxiety crowd out clear-headed decision-making

  • Money
  • inflation
  • Economies
  • Macroeconomics
  • #FairwayPartners

Expert accountants. CFO thinking. Whether it's your annual accounts, tax, or securing that next loan — Fairway Partners is in your corner.

Follow us for more articles and posts direct from professionals on      
Management, Leadership, Decision Making

Part 2 - The Leadership Dilemmas Senior Leaders Don’t...

The outer game – when the ground beneath decisions keeps shifting. In my last article (part 1), I wrote about the inner…
#change, #BUSINESS GROWTH, #growth consultant

The Hidden Cost of 'Doing It All'!

The Hidden Cost of “Doing It All” In the service industry sector, it’s easy to see why business owners roll up their…

More Articles

Financial Services

Should I overpay my mortgage or put extra into my pension?

I get asked this all the time… There isn’t a one-size-fits-all answer — but there is a simple way to think about…
L&D, Training, Behaviour Change

Training courses don't change behaviour. Workflows do.

If that sounds provocative, good. It should. Because if you're serious about behaviour change, you already know that…
ISO9001, ISO27001, UKLawFirm, ISOCertified

City Legal Solicitors Achieves Dual ISO Certification...

We are proud to announce that City Legal Solicitors has achieved ISO 9001 (Quality Management Systems) and ISO 27001…

Would you like to promote an article ?

Post articles and opinions on Professionals UK to attract new clients and referrals. Feature in newsletters.
Join for free today and upload your articles for new contacts to read and enquire further.