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Rain washes away retail sales during wet July

TheIndustry.beauty
18 August 2023

Unusually wet weather impacted British retailers last month, pushing down sales by more than had been expected, according to the Office for National Statistics.

ONS figures suggested that retail sales volumes fell 1.2% during the month, and that people chose to shop online more.

Economists had expected a fall, but only by 0.5% according to an average of different estimates provided by Pantheon Macroeconomics.

The ONS also said that June had been worse than first thought. Last month it said that June retail volumes rose 0.7%, but it has now revised this figure down to 0.6%.

Despite a heatwave in Europe which was linked to climate change, the UK had its wettest July since 2009, and the sixth wettest July on record since 1836.

The wet weather and online promotions meant the proportion of sales made via the internet grew from 26% in June to 27.4% in July, the highest level since February 2022.

There was a 2.6% fall in retail sales volumes at food shops.

Part of this was because of a drop in food sales, but much of it was due to a fall in clothes sales at supermarkets due to the bad weather.

Heather Bovill, ONS Deputy Director for Surveys and Economic Indicators, said: "Retail sales fell sharply in July as poor weather impacted most sectors.

"It was a particularly bad month for supermarkets as the summer washout combined with the increased cost of living meant sluggish sales for both clothing and food.

"Department store and household goods sales also dropped significantly.

"The wet weather did mean a good month for online retailing, as discounting plus consumers shopping from the comfort of their homes boosted sales."

The amount that shoppers spent also fell, but at the slightly slower rate of 1%.

This continued to add to the trend that people are spending more to get less that has been seen in the official statistics over recent years.

Due to high inflation levels, people are buying around 1.8% less in volume terms, but spending 16.4% more in value terms compared to February 2020, before the pandemic hit.

Martin Beck, Chief Economic Advisor to the EY Item Club, said: "With sales in July well below the second quarter average, there appears to be a good chance that sales volumes could fall in the current quarter.

"But while the EY Item Club doesn’t think July’s particular weakness is wholly indicative of the outlook for retail, given the weather factor, subdued growth is likely to characterise the sector for the foreseeable future."


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