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UK Shopper Numbers Rose Last Week But Outlook Bleak

By Dayeeta Das
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UK Shopper Numbers Rose Last Week But Outlook Bleak

The number of shoppers at British retail outlets rose by 6.2% last week versus the previous week, helped by many schools being on half-term holiday, market researcher Springboard said.

But it warned the recovery will be short lived, with new COVID-19 restrictions closing all non-essential stores in England for a month from 5 November.

Springboard said shopper numbers, or footfall, in the week to 31 October increased by 5.2% on high streets, 3.5% in retail parks and 11% in shopping centres compared to the previous week.

Marginal Improvement

Footfall on a year-on-year basis was down 32.5%, a marginal improvement from the week before when it was down 32.9%.

“The school half-term break last week delivered a boost to footfall in UK retail destinations, with a noticeable increase from the week before despite a significant decrease in footfall in Wales (down 53.7%) as a consequence of the firebreak (lockdown)," said Springboard director Diane Wehrle.

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She said the UK government's announcement on Saturday of a second national lockdown for England from Thursday was likely to boost footfall Monday to Wednesday as consumers try to make essential purchases and buy for Christmas before all non-essential retail stores close for a month.

"Over the next month the results will look very different, with an annual decline that could reach down 80%," she warned.

News by Reuters, edited by ESM. Click subscribe to sign up to ESM: European Supermarket Magazine.

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