A GlobalData apparel analyst tells Just Style UK
apparel retailers will need to make smart decisions in the coming months as
clothing and footwear is attributed to the UK's gross domestic product (GDP)
falling 0.1% in Q2 following the Bank of England increasing interest rates and
announcing a recession later this year.
The UK’s Office for National Statistics (ONS) has revealed the decline
in the UK’s gross domestic product (GDP) for the second quarter of 2022 a week
after the Bank of England announced the country is projected to enter
recession from the fourth quarter of this year and made the decision to
increase interest rates by half a percentage point (the largest increase for 27
years).
ONS explains real household expenditure fell by 0.2% between April and June
this year, which was driven by falls in clothing and footwear, net tourism,
food and non-alcoholic beverages, and restaurants and hotels. It points out
this was partially offset by rises in expenditure on transport, housing and
health.
In current price terms, however household expenditure rose by 2.6% in the
period, reflecting recent inflationary pressures on the value of this spending.
GlobalData’s associate apparel analyst Louise Delglise-Favre
tells Just Style exclusively she is not surprised that falling GDP is partly
being attributed to clothing and says apparel retailers would’ve been expecting
this as well.
However, she adds: “It’s now up to UK apparel retailers to be tight on
spending and make smart business decisions as consumer budgets are already
tight and will continue to be so for the foreseeable future so it is essential
to sell what consumers want and need.”
She adds: “The rise in interest rates that was announced last week is really
going to squeeze people’s budgets as if consumers have more to pay for their
mortgage it will of course limit the amount of money that can be spent on
non-essential items such as clothing and is one of the categories that usually
suffers when budgets are squeezed.”
Delglise-Favre highlights the threat of a long-lasting recession is scary
because it means consumer budgets will be squeezed for a longer period of time.
She hopes there will be a reduction in inflation by that point but says it
is “still up in the air.”
She also worries for the apparel retailers that have not been
successful in recent months as they are the ones at most risk of collapse and
this could fuel the recession, which will lead to a vicious cycle.
She concludes: “It’s going to be a survival of the fittest in terms of which
UK apparel retailers have the most robust strategy and apparel brands and
retailers not performing so well will need to fight extra hard to get a piece
of consumers’ already reduced spending wallets.”
By Just Style