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September retail sales fall 0.2%, ONS reveals

September retail sales fall 0.2%, ONS reveals

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September retail sales volumes fell by 0.2% and by 2.6% when compared with the same period in 2020, according to the latest Office of National Statistics (ONS) results.

Non-food stores reported a fall of 1.4% in sales volumes in September 2021, which was mainly due to a 9.3% decrease in household goods stores such as furniture and lighting stores, and other non-food stores such as sports equipment stores, which dropped by 1.7%.

Despite relaxation of Covid-19 restrictions in summer 2021, in-store retail sales remained subdued. However, the proportion of retail sales online rose to 28.1% in September 2021 from 27.9% in August, which was “substantially” higher than the 19.7% in February 2020 before the pandemic.

Overall, retail sales volumes over the last three months fell by 3.9% when compared with the previous three months, partly because of strong sales in April when non-essential retailing re-opened.

Aled Patchett, head of retail and consumer goods at Lloyds Bank, said: “Consumers spending their weekends queuing for petrol further curbed sales in September after what was already a poor end to the summer.

“Even as we enter the traditionally buoyant golden quarter – normally the busiest period for retailers in the run up to Christmas – a number of challenges threaten to undermine confidence. Chief among these are the current high gas prices which create a challenge on two fronts by increasing operating costs and reducing the spending power of consumers.”

He added: “While these issues are likely to persist for some time yet, alongside rising stock costs and HGV driver shortages, retailers will hope that consumer plans to banish the memories of a particularly dour festive period last year go undeterred.”

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