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Britons’ Shift to Eating at Home Drives Retail Sales Rebound - BLOOMBERG

FEBRUARY 21, 2025

BY  Irina Anghel


(Bloomberg) -- UK retail sales grew more strongly than expected at the start of the year, as otherwise cautious consumers spent more on food to eat at home.

The volume of goods sold online and in stores increased 1.7% in January, partly erasing a revised 0.6% loss recorded during the festive season in December, the Office for National Statistics said on Friday. The increase last month was the largest since May. Economists had been expecting a 0.5% gain.

The data showed that food sales were the strongest since the start of the pandemic in March 2020, pushing up the overall figure despite decreases in other categories. Specialist stores like butchers and bakers, as well as supermarkets and alcohol and tobacco shops, all reported strong activity thanks to more people eating at home in January.

While the headline figure may help the Labour government counter an overall narrative of economic stagnation, sector-by-sector data suggests consumers remain cautious as they brace for more shocks. Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves has been promising to kick start growth after her first budget in October imposed payroll taxes that prompted warnings from top employers that they could be forced to cut jobs.

“Clothing shops and household goods stores had less of a successful month with retailers reporting lackluster sales due to weak consumer confidence,” ONS Senior Statistician Hannah Finselbach said.

Retail sales have declined 0.6% across a three-month period and remain below pre-Covid levels, the ONS figures also showed.

While Reeves has announced a wide range of long-term growth measures, economists warn it will take years before those have an impact on output. This means that any hopes of more immediate demand boosts are pinned on consumers.

Weak consumer confidence is also becoming a growing risk for the UK’s largest retailers. Shops are warning they’ll have to increase prices to cope with Labour’s hike in employment taxes as well as the third large increase in the minimum wage.

Primark-owner Associated British Foods Plc said it expected weaker sales this year due to bleak sentiment, while fashion and homewares retailer Next also said it expects a of a slowdown in sales. Overall, retail shares have underperformed the FTSE 350 Index, falling over 11% compared to a 4.8% gain since Labour’s budget.

--With assistance from Alice Gledhill, Harumi Ichikura, Mark Evans, Joel Rinneby and Tom Rees.

(Updates with PMIs in eighth paragraph.)

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