Retail spend up as department chains lag

Retail spending has risen 0.4 per cent to $26.557 billion in April but department stores are yet to see an improvement.

Shoppers walk past retails outlets

Retail spending was up 0.4 per cent in April but shoppers are still not favouring department stores. (AAP)

Retail spending has ticked up, driven by demand for groceries, household goods and eating out but department stores remain under pressure.

Seasonally adjusted retail spending rose 0.4 per cent to $26.557 billion in April, beating market expectations of a 0.3 per cent rise.

Retail spending in March was flat.

Food retailing rose 0.3 per cent to $10.818 billion in April, while household goods retailing climbed 0.7 per cent to $4.617 billion.

Cafe, restaurant and takeaway spending was also higher, up 1.3 per cent in April, after a 0.8 per cent fall the preceding month, Australian Bureau of Statistics data show.

But consumers gave department stores a wide berth, with sales at those stores down 0.9 per cent in April after a 0.5 per cent fall in March.

The latest numbers come as David Jones and Myer, the nation's biggest department stores, struggle to attract customers amid competition from cheaper outlets and online sellers.

David Jones's South African owner, Woolworths Holdings, wrote down the value of its Australian investment earlier this year, cutting its book value by $712.5 million as weak sales led to a 39 per cent drop in half-year pre-tax profit.

Myer shares remain near their all-time lows following a string of poor sales results, most recently a three per cent fall in third-quarter sales to $2.4 billion - a result accompanied by a warning that warm weather was hurting early winter sales.

The ABS data shows that clothing, footwear and personal accessory sales have continued to come under pressure, down 0.8 per cent in April following a 0.2 per cent fall the previous month.

ANZ economist Jo Masters said the figures were better than expected but not enough to ease concerns about stagnant household spending.

"We remain cautious about consumer spending, particularly for discretionary items, given the slowdown in the housing market and high petrol prices," Ms Masters said.


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Source: AAP



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