UK Retail Sales Fall Unexpectedly During Festive Season
January 17 2020 - 1:31AM
RTTF2
UK retail sales declined unexpectedly even in festive season in
December signaling that weak consumer spending weighed on economic
growth in the last quarter of 2019.
Retail sales volume, including auto fuel, dropped 0.6 percent
month-on-month, following a 0.8 percent decrease in November, data
from the Office for National Statistics showed Friday.
This was the fifth consecutive month of no growth. Economists
had forecast a monthly growth of 0.6 percent.
Excluding auto fuel, retail sales fell 0.8 percent, the same
pace of decline as logged in November and in contrast to the
expected growth of 0.8 percent.
Food store sales fell 1.3 percent, which was the largest drop
since December 2016. At the same time, non-food store sales slid
0.9 percent in December. Meanwhile, automotive fuel sales advanced
1.6 percent.
Annual growth in retail sales volume, including auto fuel,
improved marginally to 0.9 percent from 0.8 percent a month ago.
However, this was much slower than the expected growth of 2.7
percent.
Similarly, excluding auto fuel, retail sales volume increased
0.7 percent after rising 0.6 percent in November. Economists had
forecast an annual growth of 3 percent.
In the fourth quarter, retail sales declined 1 percent. A
similar big fall was last seen in March 2017.
Early this month, the British Retail Consortium said 2019 sales
were the worst on record as the UK faced the prospect of a no deal
Brexit, as well as political instability that concluded in a
December General Election.
December's outright fall in retail sales, despite a boost from
the lateness of Black Friday, does not bode well for GDP growth in
December and could nudge the Bank of England yet closer still to
cutting rates at the end of the month, Thomas Pugh, an economist at
Capital Economics, said.
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