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Coronavirus

Poor July sales rock high street recovery

Poor in-store sales through the month of July have โ€œdampened hopes of a recoveryโ€ across UK high streets, according to the latest High Street Sales Tracker from BDO.

In-store like-for-like sales decreased by 39.4% last month, down from a marginal base of 0.1% that was reported the year before.ย 

According to BDO, โ€œoptimistic hopes of a quick bounce-backโ€ for the high street have now been tempered as July marked the sixth consecutive month of negative total like-for-like sales, which โ€œunderscores significant long-term challenges facing retailersโ€.

The firm found that in-store like-for-like sales for lifestyle fell by 35.4% in the period, down from the โ€œalready poorโ€ 3% decline reported the same period the year prior.ย 

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Meanwhile, fashion in-store like-for-like sales plummeted by 50% in July, down from the 1.2% rise last year, marking the fifth month of negative like-for-like sales for in-store fashion.

Homeware, however, saw an โ€œimpressive reboundโ€ in the period, with in-store like-for-like sales up by 5.4% this month, marking only a 0.4% decline against last year.

In July, three out of four weeks saw positive in-store sales for homeware, marking the first positive monthly like-for-like sales for the category since January.

Despite overall poor sales across high street destinations, non-store sales remained high in the period, with a year-on-year increase of 81.2%, up from a 20.5% increase last year.ย 

According to BDO, the reopening of bricks-and-mortar stores has, however, led to a โ€œqualified diminishingโ€ against April, May, and June, which all saw non-store like-for-like sales of above 100%.

Sophie Michael, head of retail and wholesale at BDO, said: โ€œJuly has marked yet another difficult month for struggling retailers. Despite initial optimism that the reopening of stores would see the high street bounce back, the July results tell a more difficult story.ย 

โ€œThe reality is that footfall remains dismal, and some retailers opted for a more gradual approach to opening their estates last month while social distancing measures also continued to restrict capacity in-store.โ€

She added: โ€œLow discretionary spend remains a major factor that will continue to place a limit on the high streetโ€™s rehabilitation. In addition, the end of the Governmentโ€™s furlough scheme is likely to have a heavy impact on the retail sector, which accounts for almost 10% of British jobs and has relied heavily on the scheme.ย 

โ€œIt is clear that the retail sector is essential to the broader economic recovery. With more high street chains at risk and further job losses predicted, recovery looks a long way off. The high street is crying out for a confidence boost but with the full impact of coronavirus on the UK economy yet to be realised, uncertainty will prevail for the foreseeable future.โ€

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