The Press

Black Friday shopping outsells Boxing Day

- Debrin Foxcroft debrin.foxcroft@stuff.co.nz

New Zealand shoppers spent

$100 million more on Black Friday than on Boxing Day this year.

New Zealanders spent $149.8m on Boxing Day, traditiona­lly one of New Zealand’s busiest shopping days, according to eftpos provider Paymark.

This was a 3.9 per cent increase on last year, but the shopping numbers paled in comparison to the $253m spent on Black Friday, just a month earlier.

Spending over the six weeks leading into Christmas Day was up 4.6 per cent on 2018, with Kiwis clocking up

$8.88 billion in shopping across all retailers.

Spending growth was highest outside the major centres, including Marlboroug­h, which saw a 13.3 per cent increase, Whanganui with an

11.5 per cent increase and Wairarapa with a 11.2 per cent rise in sales.

Spending growth was moderate in Northland/Auckland with a 1.5 per cent rise but 0.8 per cent down in Otago and 3.2 per cent down on the West Coast.

First Retail chief executive Chris Wilkinson said December was a good month for retail, but there were signs that traditiona­l habits were beginning to shift.

Spending was more dispersed, with more retailers offering Black Friday sales, he said.

‘‘This has been an evolving trend,’’ he said.

‘‘More retailers jumped on board with Black Friday.

‘‘In the past it was just the big retailers who could maximise it but this year we saw everyone jumping on board, including supermarke­ts.’’

This shift in shopping habits was mirrored across Australasi­a at the moment, he said.

‘‘It was a very slow start for stores [on Thursday]. In the past you had queues lining up outside stores for Boxing Day sales, but there wasn’t as much of that yesterday,’’ he said.

For core retailers, excluding food and hospitalit­y retailers, this year’s Boxing Day results depended on the particular market they operated in.

Underlying spending for the key group of merchants was 0.4 per cent below Boxing Day last year.

Spending was up for the likes of sport equipment retailers, up 5.6 per cent, and hardware stores saw a 6.6 per cent increase.

Clothing and footwear stores saw a 7.6 per cent decline in sales from last year.

Liquor stores were the big winners with a 14.2 per cent increase in spending on Boxing Day, followed by supermarke­ts that saw a 5.1 per cent increase in spending from the same day last year.

Wilkinson said the weather also had an impact as many Kiwis took advantage of the sun to enjoy leisure time after a volatile December.

Looking forward, retailers would continue to try and maximise that early start over the next few years, Wilkinson said.

If Australian trends were anything to go by, stores will also try to maintain shoppers’ interest past Christmas by offering big, blanket ‘‘one day only’’ Boxing Day sales, he said.

 ?? CHRISTEL YARDLEY/STUFF ?? Boxing Day was busy but more was spent on Black Friday.
CHRISTEL YARDLEY/STUFF Boxing Day was busy but more was spent on Black Friday.
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