Burton Mail

Retailers beat expectatio­ns after worst December on record

UK SHOPS NOTCH UP BIGGEST SINGLE MONTHLY GAIN IN CLOSE TO THREE YEARS

- By BUSINESS REPORTER

THE UK’S shops bounced back from a record poor December performanc­e last month, notching up their biggest single monthly gain in close to three years.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said that retail sales volumes, which also include online retailers, rose 3.4 per cent during January, up from a fall of 3.3 per cent in December.

It was the fastest rise since April 2021, the month when non-essential retailers were allowed to reopen following the third national lockdown for the Covid-19 pandemic.

“After a very weak December, retail sales rebounded in January with the largest monthly rise since April 2021,” said Heather Bovill, deputy director for surveys and economic indicators at the ONS.

“This means that overall sales have now recovered to pre-december levels, although if we look at the broader picture, they are still below where they were pre-pandemic.”

The January reading was also a lot higher than the 1.5 per cent that economists had forecast.

A lot of the change was due to food shops, which saw sales increase 3.4 per cent during the months.

“Sales increased across nearly all retail sectors, and it was a particular­ly strong month for supermarke­ts,” Ms Bovill said.

“Household goods stores, sports shops and department store retailers were amongst those reporting robust trading due to January sales promotions.

“A fall in prices at the pump also meant a solid month for fuel sales.

Clothing shops were the only area not to see growth this month.”

Silvia Rindone, retail lead at consultanc­y EY, said retailers are normally challenged in January because customers tighten their belts after Christmas. But the latest data shows this did not happen this year.

“There was sales volume growth in all sub-sectors, apart from clothing and footwear, which saw a 1.4 per cent fall,” she said.

“This is largely due to the changing role of the January sales – shoppers no longer queue in the early hours to find a bargain, with retailers instead focussing their attention on key promotiona­l dates during the ‘golden quarter’ such as Black Friday and Cyber Monday, and discountin­g far earlier in the season.

“As a result, many shoppers cut back on discretion­ary spend at the start of the year.”

Kris Hamer, director of insight at the British Retail Consortium, said: “There was promising news as sales volumes rose for the second time in three months, following 19 prior months of decline.

“This reflected rising levels of consumer confidence, as well as a boost from the January sales.

“Nonetheles­s, shoppers remained cautious as they entered the third year of the high cost of living.”

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