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UK retail sales fall unexpectedly in January | UK retail sales fall unexpectedly in January |
(35 minutes later) | |
UK retail sales fell unexpectedly in January, confounding economists' expectations for a rise. | UK retail sales fell unexpectedly in January, confounding economists' expectations for a rise. |
Volumes fell 0.6% from December 2012, hurt by heavy snowfall, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. | Volumes fell 0.6% from December 2012, hurt by heavy snowfall, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) said. |
Volumes also fell 0.6% from a year ago, the first annual fall in 17 months. | Volumes also fell 0.6% from a year ago, the first annual fall in 17 months. |
The ONS highlighted weak sales in the food sector, which dropped 2.6% year-on-year to the lowest level since April 2004. It also said small stores had fared worse than large stores. | The ONS highlighted weak sales in the food sector, which dropped 2.6% year-on-year to the lowest level since April 2004. It also said small stores had fared worse than large stores. |
Smaller retailers in the food sector suggested that the heavy snow seen in the second half of January had affected sales. | Smaller retailers in the food sector suggested that the heavy snow seen in the second half of January had affected sales. |
In contrast, larger retailers suggested that some of the increase they saw came from a rise in online sales. | In contrast, larger retailers suggested that some of the increase they saw came from a rise in online sales. |
The amount spent online accounted for 10.1% of all retail spending, excluding fuel. | |
Icy conditions across much of the country in January hit many smaller shops with some forced to close altogether; that pushed down food sales quite dramatically and the weather also hit sales of fuel. | |
But this drop in High Street spending cannot all be blamed on the weather - there was also a sharper than expected fall in spending in the run up to Christmas. | |
Overall household spending has failed to increase over the last year. That has forced several high-profile store groups to close and many others to cut prices in an attempt to drum up business. | |
It all suggests that higher inflation and slow wage growth are squeezing household incomes and that is being felt in the UK's shops. | |
In the food sector, the proportion of online sales rose 27% on the year. That meant that online sales now make up a record 3.7% of all food sales. | In the food sector, the proportion of online sales rose 27% on the year. That meant that online sales now make up a record 3.7% of all food sales. |
The data for December, which had previously shown a 0.1% drop in monthly volumes, was also revised to show a steeper 0.3% decline. | |
The ONS data had an immediate impact on sterling, with the pound falling by more than a cent against the dollar to $1.5477. | The ONS data had an immediate impact on sterling, with the pound falling by more than a cent against the dollar to $1.5477. |
Inflation impact? | |
By value, retail sales fell by 0.4% on the month and were unchanged on the year. | By value, retail sales fell by 0.4% on the month and were unchanged on the year. |
The ONS said that sales at petrol stations were the biggest contributor to the drop in the amount spent. | |
Analysts were disappointed with the figures. | |
"If you define Christmas sales as the November to January period, this has been the second worst performance over the festive/sales period over the past 15 years," said George Buckley, chief UK economist at Deutsche Bank, adding that 2009-10 was the worst. | |
But he noted that other surveys had held up better. For instance, the British Retail Consortium (BRC) has said that like-for-like retail sales in January rose 1.9% compared with January 2012 - the biggest rise in more than a year. | |
"Perhaps some of today's weakness reflects higher inflation, which has risen by 0.5 percentage points over recent months," he said. |