October retail numbers hit 2-year low

05 December 2019

Growth figures of domestic retail sales have been declining since 2014 and they reached a low-point in September 2017 when they registered a growth rate of just 1.5%. They then began increasing for about a year, only to stabilise at around 3.0% to 3.5% through late 2018 before beginning another period during 2019 in which annual growth rates fell.

 According to the latest ABS figures, total retail sales were flat in October on a seasonally-adjusted basis, under the expected increase of +0.3% and less than September’s 0.2% increase. On an annual basis, retail sales increased by 2.1%, a slower rate than September’s comparable figure of 2.5%.

 Westpac senior economist Matthew Hassan said, “The spending ‘strike’ of Q3 looks to have extended into early Q4 with still no evidence of a boost from tax refunds or interest-rate cuts…” ANZ economist Adelaide Timbrell put the lack of consumer enthusiasm to spend down to a combination of “household debt levels, rising cost of living, consumer pessimism and increasing labour market risks”, noting annual sales growth had fallen to a two-year low.US Treasury yields had increased during the previous night, lending support for higher yields in the domestic market despite the lacklustre sales figures. By the end of the day, 3-year ACGB yields had crept 1bp higher to 0.69%, the 10-year yield had gained 3bps to 1.09% while the 20-year yield finished 5bps higher at 1.52%.