Otago Daily Times

February electronic card spend total down

- By SOPHIE BOOT

AUCKLAND: New Zealand seasonally adjusted retail spending on electronic cards fell in February, failing to continue January’s gain.

Retail spending on credit and debit cards fell a seasonally adjusted 0.6% last month, after a 2.7% increase in January, the biggest monthly increase since January 2006, Statistics New Zealand said.

Actual retail spending climbed 2.6% to $4.8 billion in February from the same month a year earlier, although February 2016 had an extra day of trading as it was a leap year.

‘‘The fall in total card spending in February was driven by a lull in furniture, electronic­s and department store purchases,’’ business indicators senior manager Neil Kelly said.

The Reserve Bank is keeping a close watch on consumer spending after an unexpected­ly strong gain in consumptio­n through the second half of last year, and the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research has noticed people are more willing to fund retail purchases with debt.

Yesterday’s figures show core retail spending, which excludes vehiclerel­ated industries, dropped 0.7% in February from January, with spending on durables — which includes furniture, hardware, electronic­s and pharmaceut­icals — down 2.1%, turning around a 3.2% increase in that category in January. Hospitalit­y spending fell 1.2% and apparel was down 3.3%.

Of the nonretail industries, nonretail excluding services dipped 1.3% from January, while spending in the services industry rose 2.1%.

Spending on fuel rose 2.8%, while vehicle spending slipped 0.6%.

In actual terms, cardholder­s made 128 million transactio­ns in February, down from 133 million in January, with an average value of $50. — BusinessDe­sk

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand