Skip to content Skip to sidebar Skip to footer
×

Did you know you can cook bread with steam?

Yatırımsız Deneme Bonusu

Yatırımsız deneme bonusunun ne olduğunu, nasıl alındığını ve faydalanma yöntemlerini öğrenin. Risk almadan bonus avantajlarından yararlanın!Online bahis ve casino dünyası giderek genişlerken, kullanıcılarına sunduğu avantajlar da artmaya devam ediyor. Yatırım yapmadan kazanç elde etme şansı sunan yatırımsız deneme bonusu, bu avantajlar arasında en cazip olanlardan biri olarak öne çıkıyor. "Yatırımsız Deneme Bonusu" adını verdiğimiz bu…

Read more

MSI’s Upcoming Slate Has Laptops For Gamers, Digital Creators And Astronauts

World-leading laptop manufacturer MSI has unveiled an impressive lineup of laptops for 2020 that appeal to a wide range of users. Leading the way are its flagship laptops, the GE66 Raider and GS66 Stealth, representing quite different takes on the gamer aesthetic. The GE66 Raider Aurora Edition is “the fusion of sci-fi and resplendency,” according to MSI.…

Read more

LG Gram Pre-Packed With Windows 11

Not only are all LG Gram laptops set to be shipped with Windows 11 already onboard to make life easier for customers, the company say previous LG Gram models can be upgraded to it by visiting the Microsoft website. “Shipping LG gram laptops with Windows 11 immediately after the OS launch is an example of our…

Read more

© 2026 Appliancenews. All Rights Reserved.

Dreary December: Retail Figures Hit -0.1%

Retail plunges further as sales turnover falls 0.1% for Christmas period.


Click to enlarge

The figure reported yesterday by Australian Bureau Statistics, which also showed dismal yearly growth of 2.6%, well below inflation, point to a hugely disappointing Christmas, for what should be one of the busiest times in the sales calender.

The decline was most poignant in sales of food, cafes and restaurants, while clothes and shoe retailing (up 3.5% on November) told a relatively upbeat story. Although growth in department stores like Myer and David Jones also disappointed at (1.1%), well below exceptions.

Household goods retail was also sluggish, returning 0.02% growth and comes as Dick Smith, Officeworks and Harvey Norman are all reporting tough trading and poor sales recently.

‘Other’ retailing categories was static at 0% growth.

 In trend terms, turnover rose 0.2% in December 2011. This follows a rise of 0.2% in November and a rise of 0.2% in October.

Western Australia (10%), followed by Northern Territory (4.6%), and Victoria (2.6%), showed the biggest yearly retail growth followed by Queensland (1.8%), South Australia (1.5%), Tasmania (0.9%), and New South Wales (0.9%).

Australian Capital Territory retail was the only state which fell into negative growth -1.02%.

The most surprising figures were the reduced spending on food (-0.7%) and cafes and restaurants (-1.8%) compared to November, which could be due to grocery discounting from the big supermarket chains.

ARA Executive Director, Russell Zimmerman, said consumers were being ultra conservative on their Christmas spend as sales for cafes, restaurants and food retailing shows consistent growth up until now.

The figures were also in line with reports of low consumer sentiment and ensuring debt levels were kept manageable, he added.

Heavy discounting also helped prop up the clothing and footwear industry but the sluggish growth also shows consumers weren’t enticed to part with their cash, despite the interest rates cuts.

However, the ABS figures did not include a category for online trading, which the retail chief warned was a grave mistake.
 

 

“Drilling down into ABS retail sub categories, showed NEC retailing ‘not elsewhere classified’, which includes pure play online among other things, jumped 14.7 percent year on year.” 

The ARA is calling on the ABS to rethink its category grouping to include online trading to give the industry some real data to help analyse key trends.

“Flat trade figures also show consumers weren’t really convinced by interest rate cuts over November and December, which strengthens the case for a further rate cut from the RBA tomorrow which banks need to pass on in full to their customers,” Zimmerman said.

Leave a comment

0.0/5