British shops suffered their worst August in three years, a survey showed on Friday, as inflationary pressures and a record heatwave drove consumers away and a shift to buying online continued.
Accountancy and business advisory firm BDO said its monthly High Street Sales Tracker (HSST) showed like-for-like sales dropped 2.7% in August from a year earlier.
That marked the seventh straight month that in-store sales have fallen.
Inflation Gains
Above-target inflation and sluggish wage growth are denting spending on goods other than food, while a record-breaking summer heatwave made spending in bars and on entertainment more appealing than shopping.
In the fashion sector, in-store sales fell every week in August, and by more than 3% during three of those weeks, for their worst performance since 2015.
Homeware sales did even worse, slumping 6.1% - the sub-sector's worst performance August since 2012.
In contrast, online sales of all goods jumped 13.7%.
"In a climate of rising interest rates, prices rising and subdued real wage growth, there is limited discretionary spend left and that is taking its toll on fashion and homeware sales, especially bigger-ticket items," said Sophie Michael, BDO's head of retail and wholesale.
A survey published by the British Retail Consortium (BRC) on Tuesday reported sluggish sales growth for August.
Recent trading updates from retailers have also been subdued.
On Thursday electricals and mobile phones retailer Dixons Carphone reported flat underlying sales in its latest quarter, while department store John Lewis said on Tuesday that its total sales rose just 1.3% in the five weeks to Sept. 1.
News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.