TOP 5 September 2023 City Centre Retail Spend Insights.

Based on Beauclair Data across the largest 62 Cities and Towns nationwide.

  1. Customers & retail spend both up, but growth slower than YTD picture. 
    • Across our 62 Cities, customers were up +3% and sales up +3% versus September 2022, and 4/5 top sectors saw customers and sales growth. A strong performance but lagging the YTD figures of +4% customer growth and +5% sales growth.

Table of retail trends growth rates,

2. Heath & Beauty and General Retail momentum continues

  • Healthy and Beauty grew +8% sales and +5% customers, ahead of a strong YTD performance. This sector includes H&B product sales but also salons & gyms, experiential activities that help drive people into high streets. 
  • General Retail saw customers +7% and spend up by +8%, just behind YTD performance. Has it exited the turmoil and closures of the last few years with a smaller but stronger sector?

3.  Fashion has a poor month, customer and sales down, hit by warm weather.

  • Customers down -1.6% and sales down -1.1% with ATV also in decline.
  • Helen Dickinson OBE, CEO of the BRC was quoted as saying “The Indian summer also meant sales of autumnal clothing, knitwear and coats, have yet to materialise”.
  • YTD Fashion is however still growing against all measures.

4. Food & Drink & Grocery see strong Sept sales growth, but more muted customer growth.

  • After two months of sales and customer decline, Grocery sales were up +4% and customers up +2%, stronger than YTD picture of +1% customer growth and +3% sales. 
  • Food & Drink saw strong +7% sales growth but customers up just +2%.

5. Strong growth momentum coupled with falling inflation could present an opportunity.

  • Despite complex dynamics that could change the future, there is strong 2023 YTD growth momentum across all measures and the top 5 largest sectors going into retail’s “Golden Quarter”. 
  • Rates of inflation look to have peaked and sluggish UK growth has led some to predict a hold in interest rate rises in November, both of which could potentially give consumers more buying power. 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *