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Surprise gain in UK retail sales | Surprise gain in UK retail sales |
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UK retailers defied predictions of another monthly sales slump in July despite pushing up prices, according to official figures. | UK retailers defied predictions of another monthly sales slump in July despite pushing up prices, according to official figures. |
The Office for National Statistics said retail sales were up 0.8% last month, reversing a sharp fall of 3.9% in June. | The Office for National Statistics said retail sales were up 0.8% last month, reversing a sharp fall of 3.9% in June. |
Analysts had been expecting a drop of 0.2% as cost-conscious consumers continue to struggle with high fuel and food bills and mortgage repayments. | Analysts had been expecting a drop of 0.2% as cost-conscious consumers continue to struggle with high fuel and food bills and mortgage repayments. |
The data was questioned as it clashed with evidence hinting at grimmer news. | |
Disputed | |
The British Retail Consortium (BRC), which produces its own survey of retail sales, disputed the idea that July's sales were higher than June. | |
The UK consumer is down but by no means out Geoffrey Dicks, Royal Bank of Scotland | |
"Consumer confidence remains low, unemployment is rising and the housing market weakening," said Stephen Robertson, BRC director general. | |
"It's hard to see what could produce the sales growth boost ONS are reporting or their finding that smaller retailers are outperforming larger ones," he added. | |
The ONS figures measure the volume of sales and some experts believe the value of transactions gives a more accurate picture of High Street conditions. | |
Some economists were also sceptical that the data, which has caused controversy since May figures showed a surge in sales of 3.6%, reflected the reality on the High Street. | |
"There has not been this level of volatility in the ONS monthly sales data in three decades," said David Page, an economist at Investec. | |
Consumer resilience? | |
The ONS monthly figures for July cut the annual rate of growth to 2.1% - the lowest in two years. | |
But this was still only modestly lower from the 2.2% year-on-year rate recorded in June. | |
Retailers across the board reported a good month in a sign that the consumer slowdown may not be as sharp as feared. | |
Food sales rose 0.3% as shoppers hunted out bargains at discount stores, such as Aldi and Lidl, as well as budget lines within the bigger supermarkets. | |
Sales of household goods and clothing also held up well, although the ONS pointed out they were coming off a very low base with falls in June. | |
"Despite an intensifying squeeze on household budgets, the UK consumer is down but by no means out," said Geoffrey Dicks, an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland. | |
Rising prices | |
The better-than-expected figures came even as retailers were forced to raise prices to prevent inflation from eroding their bottom line. | |
Prices on average rose to their highest level since 1998 - up 1.6% compared to a year ago. | |
This was largely driven by the soaring cost of food, which rose at the fastest pace since 1992 - up more than 6%. | |
With annual consumer price inflation - which rose to 4.4% in July - beginning to feed into retail prices, an imminent interest rate cut remains unlikely, some economists observed. | |
But many also concluded that July's figures did not represent a pick-up in consumer confidence and sales were likely to weaken in the coming months as the economy slows further. |