Whatâs Going On Here?Data out on Tuesday showed UK retail sales surged last month, and bargain-hunting Brits are now just crossing their fingers that all that shopping arrives sometime â anytime â soon. What Does This Mean?Savvy shoppers were snapping up Black Friday deals left, right, and center last month â partly because of low prices, sure, but also in a bid to get ahead of potential shipping delays this holiday season. That helped specialist retailers â including gift, toy, and jewelry stores â post a 21% increase in sales compared to the November before the pandemic. Clothing sales likewise boasted their biggest increase since Covid arrived, but it wasnât just stores that did well: bars, pubs, and clubs saw their sales climb by 34% versus the same time in 2019. Add it all up, and retail sales in the UK were up a pre-pandemic-busting 4.1%. Why Should I Care?The bigger picture: No more sales. Brits had good reason to hunt a bargain, with nearly 90% of them on edge about rising prices, according to data from credit card provider Barclaycard. They canât even rely on getting things cheap in the January sales: a major retail organization just said that rising costs could leave retailers struggling to cut prices in the New Year. That alone could damage consumer spending, and then thereâs the ever-increasing likelihood that the Bank of England will raise interest rates in the next few months â a move that would leave shoppers with even less cash to spend.
Zooming out: Hot property. Lifeâs bigger buys are getting more expensive too, with strong demand and a property shortage pushing up Britainâs real estate prices. In fact, data out on Tuesday showed the average house price rose to a record ÂŁ273,000 ($361,000) last month â up 8.2% from the same time last year, and the quickest three-month rise since 2006. |