
THE GIST
For a while, Europe’s retailers have been living in that pleasant illusion where geopolitics is someone else’s problem.
Oil spikes, shipping chaos, energy shocks, all very dramatic, but shoppers kept buying. That illusion is starting to crack. Next and H&M are now signaling that if the Middle East conflict lasts, prices go up and consumers eventually push back.
WHAT HAPPENED
United Kingdom retailer Next and Swedish fast-fashion giant H&M both warned that a prolonged Middle East conflict could feed through into higher costs and weaker consumer demand.
Next said it expects about £15 million (about $20 million) in additional short-term costs, including £8 million from air freight, £4 million from sea freight surcharges and £3 million from higher U.K. energy costs. For now, those costs are being offset elsewhere. But chief executive Simon Wolfson said that if the conflict lasts longer than three months, the company may need to raise prices by around 1.5% to 2%.
H&M struck a similar tone. Chief executive Daniel Erver said the conflict has had only a limited direct impact so far, but warned that prolonged disruption could push up energy and transport costs, creating fresh inflationary pressure on already stretched consumers.
The warnings come as broader cracks appear across the consumer economy. Energy and shipping costs have risen as the Middle East conflict disrupts trade routes and commodity markets. Chemical companies such as BASF and Lanxess have already raised prices, feeding through into everyday goods.
Other retailers are flagging similar risks. Polish fashion group LPP has warned on fuel and logistics costs, while the U.K.’s Co-op said inflation has not yet hit shelf prices but remains a looming threat.
So far, demand has held up. Both Next and H&M say shoppers are still spending. The bigger question is what happens when temporary cost pressures become permanent features of the system.
WHY IT MATTERS
Because this is how inflation returns, gradually, then all at once.
Retailers have just spent years dealing with the aftershocks of the Ukraine war, when higher energy costs rippled through supply chains and squeezed both margins and consumers. No one wants a repeat. But they may not get a choice.
Our analysts just identified a stock with the potential to be the next Nvidia. Tell us how you invest and we'll show you why it's our #1 pick. Tap here.
The transmission mechanism is already in motion. Freight costs rise. Energy prices follow. Suppliers adjust. Retailers absorb what they can. Eventually, prices move.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Taste the World: Five Food sources That Have Dazzled Worldwide Palates - 2
Eli Lilly to build $6 billion Alabama plant as part of US manufacturing push - 3
Over 60 local leaders push Netanyahu to halt haredi draft bill, warn of social rift - 4
Minneapolis ICE shooting live updates: Protests continue over agent's killing of Renee Nicole Good; Walz puts National Guard on standby - 5
Grass Care Administrations for a Wonderful, Sound Yard
IDF drops over 80 explosives on Tehran weapon production sites in latest strike
New hybrid mpox strain discovered in UK after US reports local spread
Miss Thailand Pageant Contestant's Veneers Fall Out During Speech on Stage
Warning for snow and ice extended
Instructions to Guarantee Kids Foster Solid Dental Propensities
What an expert on the gut microbiome eats in a day
Russian billionaire says 12-hour days and 6-day workweeks could help save the economy
Empathy and reasoning aren’t rivals – new research shows they work together to drive people to help more
What will the Artemis 2 astronauts eat during their historic moon mission? (video)













