March 3 (Reuters) - British auto distributor Inchcape on Tuesday warned its 2026 volume growth would be at the lower end of targets due to weak Asia demand and said the Middle East conflict could delay some Japan-Europe shipments by a few weeks.

Shares in the company, which helps carmakers ship products in more than 40 markets, dropped 8% in morning trading. 

"We're talking a few weeks longer lead times for certain products, but the vast majority of the products we sell in Europe are manufactured in ...European plants," CEO Duncan Tait told Reuters, stressing that only a "small amount" of products that would normally transit the Suez Canal would face delays.

Most of its shipments to the key Latin America market come directly from India, Japan or China and bypass the Middle East, Tait said, adding the impact from the U.S.-Iran conflict was "very manageable."   

Several shipping companies have rerouted vessels around Africa, away from the Suez Canal and the Bab el-Mandeb Strait, after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

WEAK ASIA DEMAND FOR PREMIUM CARS

Inchcape expects 2026 organic volume growth at the lower end of its 3% to 5% range, mainly due to weak Asian demand for premium cars as customers cut back spending.   

"Consumers (in Asia) were a little disrupted I think as to what was going on in the world," Tait said.

Inchcape, which operates in the Americas, Asia Pacific, Europe and Africa, also expects first-half disruptions from production outages at two Japanese automakers retooling plants for electric and hybrid vehicles.

Expected strength in Colombia and Peru, stable European and African markets, and cost cuts should offset weakness in Asia and drive earnings per share growth above 10% this year, Tait said.

Adjusted operating profit in 2025 dipped 4% to 563 million pounds even as the company acted to boost margins as costs increased due to tariffs.   

($1 = 0.7495 pounds)

(Reporting by Raechel Thankam Job and Simone Lobo in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu, Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Bernadette Baum)

By Yadarisa Shabong and Simone Lobo