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UK retail sales in unexpected fall | UK retail sales in unexpected fall |
(about 7 hours later) | |
Britain's consumers took a break from shopping last month as consumer spending fell back from the high levels recorded in July. | |
Data from the Office for National Statistics showed that the volume of retail sales dropped by 0.9% in August – mainly as the result of weaker demand for food. | Data from the Office for National Statistics showed that the volume of retail sales dropped by 0.9% in August – mainly as the result of weaker demand for food. |
The ONS said that supermarkets had been particularly busy in July during the hottest of the summer weather but that activity came back to more normal levels in August. | |
After the recent run of strong economic news, the City had been expecting retail sales to grow by 0.4% between July and August, and the pound fell when the figures were released. | After the recent run of strong economic news, the City had been expecting retail sales to grow by 0.4% between July and August, and the pound fell when the figures were released. |
Food sales dropped 2.7% in August, and there was little evidence of the recent pickup in housing activity helping sales of household goods, which fell by 1.6%. | Food sales dropped 2.7% in August, and there was little evidence of the recent pickup in housing activity helping sales of household goods, which fell by 1.6%. |
Over the three months to August – considered a better guide to consumer sentiment than one month's figures – retail sales were up by 1.7%. | |
Annual growth – comparing the latest quarter with the same three months in 2012 – stood at 2.3%, the ONS said. | Annual growth – comparing the latest quarter with the same three months in 2012 – stood at 2.3%, the ONS said. |
The official figures also appear to demonstrate Britain's increasing love of online shopping. The ONS said non-store retail sales grew by 29% between August 2012 and August 2013 and that there had been a marked upward trend since the turn of the year. | |
"Since January 2013, the non-store retailing sector has seen continued year-on-year growth in both the amount spent and bought in this sector," the ONS said. | |
James Knightley, an economist at ING, said: "It is a disappointing outcome that has taken the wind out of the sails of sterling for now, but the underlying story still looks good, with the three-month-on-month total sales growth still up 1.7%, consumer confidence rising, employment increasing and credit availability improving." | |
Chris Williamson, chief economist at the market data provider Markit, believes the figures still augured well for the UK economy. He said: "Consumers pulled back on their retail spending after a spending spree in July, but retail sales are still trending higher at the fastest rate since mid-2007, meaning the economy looks set to have grown strongly in the third quarter." | |
David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), said: "Despite the fall in August, the long-term trend in retail sales is positive." | |
The wider increase in retail sales has emerged alongside a resurgence in house prices, which saw the ONS confirming this week that the housing market has surpassed its previous peak in 2008. George Osborne played down fears of a bubble on Wednesday, saying that he was "alert to the risks", adding: "But let's not pretend there's a housing boom." | |
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