May 13 (Reuters) – British property company Savills warned on Wednesday of a slowdown in residential property transactions in ‌its UK and Middle East markets, as the Iran ‌war fuels uncertainty around global interest rates, even as it retained its 2026 ​forecasts.

In the transactional business, which provides capital and leasing advisory services to commercial and residential investors and owner-occupiers and is Savills’ largest contributor to revenue, the firm said it expected delays in ‌transactions and buyers to ⁠be more cautious.

The U.S.-Israeli war against Iran has roiled global markets, raising concerns around higher-for-longer interest rates, ⁠elevated energy costs and tighter household budgets, putting pressure on property firms including house builders, rental agencies and related service providers.

“Within our key ​UK market… ​we have seen greater caution ​among both buyers and sellers ‌since the onset of the Middle East conflict,” the firm said, adding that performance in its Middle East market, which contributed about 5% to its 2025 underlying profit, had also “slowed materially” during the crisis.

Despite the warning, the firm said it was trading ‌marginally ahead of its expectations for ​the year ending December 31, with ​both revenue and profit ​predicted to grow on an annual basis. In ‌2025, its revenue rose 6% with ​underlying profit before ​tax increasing 11.4%.

In March, Savills agreed to buy real estate investment bank Eastdil Secured in a $1.1 billion deal, including ​debt, in a bid ‌to expand in North America and deepen its capital ​markets presence.

(Reporting by Prerna Bedi in Bengaluru; Editing by ​Rashmi Aich and Kate Mayberry)