FOMO DailyFOMO DailyFOMO Daily
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Finance
  • Cryptocurrency
Reading: Britain’s Next Inflation Punch Could Start With Iran and End at the Supermarket
Share
Font ResizerAa
FOMO DailyFOMO Daily
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Finance
  • Cryptocurrency
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Finance
  • Cryptocurrency
Copyright © 2026 FOMO Daily - All Rights Reserved.

Britain’s Next Inflation Punch Could Start With Iran and End at the Supermarket

The food price hit could be next.

Oscar Harding
Last updated: March 24, 2026 4:36 am
Oscar Harding
4 Min Read
Share
4 Min Read

The fuel shock is already hitting farms

Britain may be staring down another cost of living punch, and this one is building fast. The trigger is the war linked disruption around the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important trade chokepoints. Reuters reports that the conflict has disrupted fertiliser and energy flows, with roughly 30% of globally traded fertiliser moving through the route and urea prices already jumping 30% to 40%.

That is not a distant headline. That is a direct threat to the cost of producing food.

Farms run on diesel, fertiliser, transport and timing. When fuel spikes and crop inputs jump at the same moment, the pressure does not stay on the farm gate for long. AHDB says higher oil prices hit farm businesses directly through fuel, heating oil, transport, plastic wrap and agrochemicals, while also noting anecdotal evidence that red diesel prices are increasing faster than white diesel.

That matters because farmers do not get to stop. Spring work still has to happen. Machinery still has to move. Inputs still have to be bought. If those costs surge during key planting and production windows, the result is simple: margins get crushed, activity gets cut, or costs get pushed further down the chain, and that chain leads straight to consumers.

Reuters says the global fertiliser squeeze is severe enough that experts are warning of reduced crop yields, tighter food supply and a renewed wave of food price inflation if disruption persists. It also notes there are no emergency fertiliser stockpiles comparable to strategic oil reserves, making the system more exposed if the shock drags on. This is why the story matters in Britain even before supermarket prices move. The UK was already not back to normal on inflation. The Office for National Statistics said CPI was 3.0% in the 12 months to January 2026, with CPIH at 3.2%, both still above the Bank of England’s 2% target.

So this is not a fresh shock hitting a stable economy. It is an external price threat landing on top of inflation that was already too high. The energy side is just as dangerous. Reuters reported that the Iran war’s impact on the global energy system has been severe enough to force countries to pay more or cut consumption, with major disruption to flows through Hormuz and broader pressure across oil, gas and fertiliser linked supply chains.That is how a geopolitical crisis turns into a kitchen-table problem.

First comes the energy shock. Then come higher transport costs, pricier fertiliser, tighter farm margins and harder pricing decisions. After that, households feel it in the weekly shop. This is not guaranteed to become a full second inflation wave. But the warning signs are real, and they are already flashing. If disruption in Hormuz drags on, Britain’s next inflation scare may not begin with mortgage rates or tax rises. It may begin with diesel, fertiliser and food, and once it reaches the shelves, households will not care where it started.

Bitcoin Volatility Could Explode in April as SEC Reviews the Market Behind ETF Leverage
Canada and Nordic Nations Join Forces to Boost Arctic Defence Production
Short, Sharp & Strategic: Why Bitcoin’s Bear Could Be the Quickest Yet
161000 US Jobs Vanish After Revision as Bitcoin Navigates a Confusing Macro Economy
White House Meeting and the CLARITY Act

Sign up to FOMO Daily

Get the latest breaking news & weekly roundup, delivered straight to your inbox.

By signing up, you acknowledge the data practices in our Privacy Policy. You may unsubscribe at any time.
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Reddit Telegram Threads Bluesky Email Copy Link Print
ByOscar Harding
G'day I’m Oscar Harding, a Australia based crypto / web3 blogger / Summary writer and NFT artist. “Boomer in the blockchain.” I break down Web3 in plain English and make art in pencil, watercolour, Illustrator, AI, and animation. Off-chain: into  combat sports, gold panning, cycling and fishing. If I don’t know it, I’ll dig in research, verify, and ask. Here to learn, share, and help onboard the next wave.
Previous Article The Real South Australian Shock Wasn’t the Winner. It Was the Collapse on the Right.
Next Article Sleep Apnea Is Finally Getting A Post-CPAP Upgrade

Latest News

If Gold Stops Acting Safe, Bitcoin’s “Digital Gold” Story Gets a Lot Harder
Finance International Crypto News Opinion
BNB’s Bounce Looks Real. The Bigger Question Is What’s Actually Driving It.
Cryptocurrency Finance Opinion Politics
Sleep Apnea Is Finally Getting A Post-CPAP Upgrade
Health Lifestyle Technology
The Real South Australian Shock Wasn’t the Winner. It Was the Collapse on the Right.
News Opinion Politics
One Million Holders Sounds Massive. Now Comes the Hard Part.
Finance Lifestyle News Opinion
The Hack Ends First. The Damage Doesn’t.
Crime News Finance News
A $200 Billion Iran War Bill Shows Just How Big The Stakes Have Become
Economy Finance Opinion Politics War News
Fair Markets Were The Promise. The House Still Runs The Game
Finance News Opinion Politics
AI Didn’t Pull the Trigger. But It’s Already Inside the Kill Chain
ai Finance Opinion Political News Politics
Stagflation Is The Word Bitcoiners Cannot Ignore In 2026
Finance News
Gemini Lawsuit Exposes Crypto’s Next Reality Check
Finance News Opinion
CLARITY Act Breakthrough Puts Bitcoin Back In Focus
Economy Finance International Crypto News News
Morgan Stanley’s Bitcoin ETF Bet Is Really a Distribution Story
ETFs Finance News Opinion
Crypto Wallets Are Starting to Look Like Full-Blown Trading Platforms
Cryptocurrency Economy Innovation Opinion

You Might Also Like

U.S. Inflation Stalls While Job Losses Raise Questions About the Economy

March 17, 2026

Block Front-Running: Fair Launches, No Insider Edge Now

October 17, 2025

TRON, RealOpen, and the $50K Holiday Push for Crypto-Powered Luxury Homes

November 18, 2025

G Coin’s Launch Week Just Became a Live Market Test

March 21, 2026

FOMO Daily — delivering the stories, trends, and insights you can’t afford to miss.

We cut through the noise to bring you what’s shaping conversations, driving culture, and defining today — all in one quick, daily read.

  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Sport
  • Lifestyle
  • Finance
  • Cryptocurrency

Subscribe to our newsletter to get the latest articles delivered to your inbox.

FOMO DailyFOMO Daily
Follow US
Copyright © 2026 FOMO Daily. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?