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Retail squeeze looms as post-lockdown splurging begins to splutter

Retail sales sank 1.1% in February in a weaker-than-expected result, with consumers spending less following post-pandemic splurging.
Matthew Elmas
retail-trading
Source: Unsplash/Korie Cull.

A mighty retail squeeze could be coming for some of Australiaโ€™s favourite brands as the shine starts coming off the COVID-19 spending splurge.

Retail sales sank 1.1% in February in a weaker-than-expected result that economists warn is a sign of whatโ€™s to come when JobKeeper ends later this month.

Spending was the weakest since last October, falling $364 million over February alone, according to preliminary ABS data published on Friday.

Although sales are still up 8.7% in annual terms, Indeed APAC economist Callam Pickering said the outlook should worry retail bosses.

โ€œCurrent spending levels arenโ€™t sustainable โ€ฆ retail sales are likely to drop considerably over the next two years,โ€ he toldย The New Daily.

Pickering said thereโ€™s a likely โ€œprofitability squeezeโ€ on the horizon for retailers that copped higher costs during the pandemic sales bump last year and are now facing a revenue hit as spending falls from earlier peaks.

It means smaller retailers in particular โ€” who werenโ€™t able to capture as much of the COVID-19 splurge as larger competitors like JB Hi-Fi and Harvey Norman โ€” could be put in a tight spot.

โ€œNot all retailers have benefitted from COVID-19. Some have done incredibly well, others [like cafes and restaurants] have struggled,โ€ Pickering said.

Although a full set of industry-specific data has yet to be published, food spending appears to have led the monthly falls and was down 3% on January.

Retail covid
Source: The New Daily

Economists expected sales to increase by about 0.3% in February, but the outsized impact from snap lockdowns in Victoria (spending down 4%) and Western Australia (down 6%) threw out their forecasts.

A looming retail squeeze

Now, Australian Retailers Association boss Paul Zahra is warning many businesses still feeling the lockdown blues could struggle to survive.

โ€œOur CBDs and travel retailers are in deep pain, with international tourists and students still missing and office occupancy rates โ€” in Melbourne and Sydney in particular โ€” still very low,โ€ Zahra said in a statement.

โ€œThe real evaluation will be in the months ahead as to whether COVID-affected businesses will be able to survive.โ€

Aside from looming business closures, the outlook for retail is important for two other reasons.

Firstly, economies that spend faster grow quicker, and thatโ€™s good for everyone. But, retail is also a big employer and disproportionately hires younger people, who are already behind in the post-pandemic jobs recovery.

Other economists, however, say there are reasons to be optimistic, and argue thereโ€™s plenty of money in household budgets to sustain spending when JobKeeper ends.

The so-called wealth effect will help, too, Commonwealth Bank economist Kristina Clifton said.

โ€œWhen dwelling prices are rising we typically see stronger spending on cars, household furnishings and equipment and clothing,โ€ Clifton said in a research note on Friday.

Westpac economist Matthew Hassan added that when lockdowns wash out of the spending data in March, sales should go up.

โ€œWith our latest card tracker data still showing robust momentum, that points to a better month for retail, although gains increasingly look to be coming in non-retail segments of spending,โ€ he said in a research note on Friday.

The ABS also revised spending records for November, December and January after reassessing seasonal factors โ€” changing last monthโ€™s 0.5% sales lift to 0.3%.

This article was first published by The New Daily. Read the original here.ย