Carnage On The Shop Floor As UK Retail Gets Clobbered

 | Dec 18, 2018 10:32

The pressure on the retail sector has been a consistent staple for investors since the end of the financial crisis, partly as a result of changing shopping habits but also down to rising costs and outdated business models.

This has been no better illustrated by the way UK consumers behaved over the so called “Black Friday” and “Cyber Monday” weekend which saw some rather mixed messages from what is slowly becoming a regular event for UK consumers.

Spending in the lead up to Christmas now appears to take place over a longer period of time, not altogether surprising when companies like Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) start their pre-Christmas and Black Friday sales promotions from the middle of November. This tends to stretch the overall spend over a longer period of time thus creating a smoothing effect for retail sales growth which this year has been much better than it was over 12 months ago.

It also has to be remembered the problems last year, which saw retail sales growth plunge were largely self-inflicted by the Bank of England’s reckless rate cut in the wake of the 2016 Brexit referendum vote which sent inflation soaring and squeezed consumer spending.

Since the end of last year, as can be seen from the retail sales chart below, consumer activity has improved, mostly in line with the slow decline in CPI inflation from peaks of 3.1%, while wages growth has slowly improved over time from 1.7% in mid-2017 to 3.3% now.

For most of the summer annual retail sales growth averaged in excess of 3.5%, and while it has slipped back as we head towards the end of the year, the numbers still look much better than they were this time last year.