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UK shops suffer slowest growth on record in 12 months to June

World Materials 9 July 2019 11:47 (UTC +04:00)

Sales at British retailers rose at their slowest average pace on record over the past year as worries about Brexit weighed on consumers, a survey showed on Tuesday, reports Trend citing to Reuters.

Average sales growth weakened to 0.6% in the 12 months to June, the British Retail Consortium, an industry group, said, the slowest increase since it began its records in 1995.

Retailers also had their biggest annual fall for June on record - down 1.3% - as the Brexit concerns mounted and the spending boost from a heatwave and the men’s soccer World Cup in June 2018 affected the comparison, the BRC said.

“Overall, the picture is bleak: rising real wages have failed to translate into higher spending as ongoing Brexit uncertainty led consumers to put off non-essential purchases,” BRC Chief Executive Helen Dickinson said.

“The continued risk of a no-deal Brexit is harming consumer confidence and forcing retailers to spend hundreds of millions of pounds putting in place mitigations,” she added.

Last week, surveys of British companies suggested the economy shrank between April and June and Bank of England Governor Mark Carney warned of growing risks from a no-deal Brexit and global trade tensions.

In ‘like-for-like’ terms, which smooth out changes in the amount of retail space, sales fell by 1.6% in June and the 12-month average declined by 0.1%, the weakest reading in more than seven years.

Low unemployment has put more money into people’s pockets which has lifted consumer spending. This in turn has helped the economy at a time of falling investment by many companies since the Brexit vote.

But the BRC’s survey echoed two other weak gauges of consumer spending in June by the CBI and accountants BDO.

Uncertainty about Brexit has been aggravated by the ongoing Conservative Party leadership election. Many investors worry about the economic risks of a no-deal Brexit, which neither candidates has ruled out.

Over the last two weeks several British retailers have highlighted a tough environment.

Supermarket group Sainsbury’s (SBRY.L) reported a third straight quarter of declining underlying sales and rival Asda (WMT.N) described the business environment as “a perfect storm”. Health retailer Boots (WBA.O) said Britain could be heading for a recession.

“Pressure on retailers continues to mount and is seemingly coming from all angles: economic, geo-political, environmental and behavioural,” said Paul Martin, head of UK retail at KPMG, which produces the survey with BRC. “Consumer spending is only likely to fall further as things stand, and cost efficiency remains vital.”

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