No festive cheer for retailers
Paymark says December proved to be a busy month as spending topped $6 billion though its electronic card transaction network, but that the growth rate was low.
There were 120.7 million transactions, 2 per cent more than in December last year, but this amounted to a 1.2 per cent increase in the value of goods and services traded though the network, below the 5 per cent per annum underlying growth rate of the previous 11 months.
In Auckland/Northland, the value of transactions did not grow at all from December to December, Paymark, which processes 75 per cent of the country’s electronic card transactions, said.
The fastest annual growth in spending occurred away from the major centres in Wanganui (6.6 per cent), Palmerston North (5.8 per cent) and Southland (5.7 per cent).
“Paymark transactions reached new highs before Christmas and over the month in general but figures also point to several pressures on merchants,” Darren Hopper, the company’s head of ecommerce, digital experience and marketing said.
“The annual growth rate was generally low and below the rate of the recent months that would have shaped retailer expectations,” he said in a statement.
“We also saw widespread discounting which appears to have accelerated the trend towards lower average transaction value,” he said.
There continues to be growing use of scheme credit and debit cards which adds to the bank fees paid by merchants, he said.
And, to further pressure the bricks and mortar merchants, e-commerce growth has accelerated.
Most Paymark transactions are still with traditional bank — issued debit cards, totalling 70.7 million in December — but these were 2.1 per cent fewer than a year ago, Hopper said.
Across all cards, the average transaction value was $49.77, down 0.8 per cent on 12 months earlier.
“Anecdotally there were also many sales, starting back on Black Friday on November 23 , and this may have pushed the average transaction value lower as well,” he said.
The busiest day of 2018 recorded by Paymark before Christmas was Thursday December 20, when $296 million worth of transactions were processed.
The busiest period was at 12.16pm Saturday December 22 when a record 182 transactions per second were switched through the network.
Paymark said the first 23 days of the month showed that spending was up 1 per cent (excluding what Kiwis paid for fuel) on the same period in 2017.