Wet February dampens retail sales amid Middle East conflict threat to confidence


Februaryโ€™s wet weather dampened retail sales across the UK amid warnings that the Middle East conflict is threatening to halt any longer-term recovery in consumer confidence.

Total UK retail sales increased by just 1.1% year on year, against already sluggish growth last February and well below the 12-month average of 2.3%, according to British Retail Consortium (BRC) and KPMG figures.

Food sales were flat in real terms at 2.9% โ€“ below the 12-month average growth of 3.8% โ€“ as shoppers tightened their belts.

Non-food sales fell by 0.4% overall โ€“ rising in stores by 0.2% but declining by 1.3% online as households reined in spending after Christmas and Januaryโ€™s rebound.

However, Valentineโ€™s Day did provide a small bright spot, with jewellery, watches and perfume performing better as consumers still treated loved ones.

BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson said: โ€œFebruaryโ€™s grey, wet weather hit retail sales hard.

โ€œWhile retailers look to Spring and better weather to lift spirits and revive sales, conflict in the Middle East threatens knocking any recovery off course.

โ€œProlonged low consumer confidence adds strain on retailers already facing mounting cost pressures, higher taxes and a growing regulatory burden.โ€

Sarah Bradbury, the chief executive of analysts IGD, said: โ€œAs March begins, the outlook is deteriorating. The OBRโ€™s latest forecast downgraded near-term growth, whilst the conflict in the Middle East is strengthening concerns over fuel costs, which could impact food price inflation, if the situation continues.โ€

In separate figures from Barclays, card spending grew just 1% in February as inflation and travel concerns dampened confidence.

Some 82% of consumers are concerned about the impact of tensions in the Middle East on fuel costs, energy bills (81%) and inflation (78%), as well as on food prices (76%), a poll for the bank early this month found.

However, entertainment spending increased by 9.9% in February โ€“ an 11-month high โ€“ with transactions peaking when tickets to Harry Stylesโ€™s Together, Together Tour went on sale on January 30.

Jack Meaning, chief UK economist at Barclays, said: โ€œThis timely insight into consumersโ€™ reaction to the evolving situation in the Middle East highlights perfectly the economic risks for the UK if the conflict doesnโ€™t find a way to de-escalate in short order.

โ€œThe start of 2026 had brought positive signs of growth and improving consumer sentiment. A new, prolonged bout of uncertainty risks snuffing that out before it has had a chance to really get going.โ€

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