Daily Express

UK retail sales get lift in June

- By Henry Saker-Clark

UK retailers have said they saw the biggest monthly sales jump in more than two years in June after swathes of high street stores reopened but warned that the troubled sector is “not out of the woods yet”.

The BRC-KPMG retail sales monitor for June revealed a 3.4 per cent increase, representi­ng the highest increase since May 2018.

It represente­d the first growth since the lockdown and significan­tly outstrips an average decline of 6.4 per cent over the previous three months.

The jump was driven by a surge in online sales, while it was also boosted by the reopening of non-essential retailers on

June 15.

In June, UK retail sales increased by 10.9 per cent on a like-forlike basis – which excludes sales at temporaril­y closed stores – against the same month last year.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the British Retail Consortium (BRC), said: “June finally saw a return to growth in total sales, primarily driven by online as a result of lockdown measures being eased and pent-up demand being released. “Despite footfall still being well below pre-coronaviru­s levels, average spend was up as consumers made the most of their occasional shopping trips.

“Though a month of growth is welcome news, retail is not out of the woods yet. The pandemic continues to pose huge challenges to the industry, with ongoing store closures and job losses across the UK.”

Over the three months to June, food sales increased 7.3 per cent on a like-for-like basis as supermarke­t sales remained strong.

Meanwhile, non-food sales in stores were 46.8 per cent lower for the quarter.

Susan Barratt, chief executive officer of IGD, said: “The continued warm weather and further easing of lockdown restrictio­ns contribute­d to another month of high growth in sales for food and grocery retail.”

Paul Martin, UK head of retail at KPMG, added: “Fashion sales have not rebounded quite as impressive­ly, though, despite reports of increased interest from those prepared to queue to enter stores.”

‘Consumers made the most of occasional shopping trips’

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