Topics:  business

Year looks good after profitable Christmas

BUSY TIME: December spending was up in Northland as shoppers opened their wallets and purses in the lead-up to Christmas, with Whangarei's Paper Plus inundated on Christmas Eve.
BUSY TIME: December spending was up in Northland as shoppers opened their wallets and purses in the lead-up to Christmas, with Whangarei's Paper Plus inundated on Christmas Eve. John Stone

While heavily weather-dependent, December retail trading in Northland experienced strong gains on previous years with commentators predicting a positive 2013.

Figures released by Paymark, which processes about 75 per cent of New Zealand's electronic card transactions, showed consumer spending in the Auckland/Northland region during December was up 2.4 per cent year-on-year to $1.86 billion.

Northland Chamber of Commerce chief executive Tony Collins said retailers he had spoken to enjoyed a relatively good Christmas.

"I think it was probably marginally better than some of them would have expected. Since Christmas, it's obviously very dependent on weather for retail shopping in Northland - there's been a few wet days which shop owners said they've experienced good trade on.

"On the fine days, a lot of Northlanders are going to go to the beach rather than go shopping."

Mr Collins said it was too early to say how the rest of summer would fare for Northland retailers but post-Christmas sales would keep turnover going.

Nationally, year-on-year spending increases during December were highest at appliance stores (up 10.3 per cent) and hardware stores (up 9.2 per cent).

Pet stores also enjoyed a 7.5 per cent surge in activity, with families welcoming new pets for Christmas or buying treats for existing furry friends.

The festive spirit was evident in a 7.1 per cent spending jump at cafes and restaurants, an 8 per cent jump at liquor retailers and a 6.3 per cent rise at department stores.

NZ Retailers Association chief executive John Albertson said December was in line with retailers' expectations. "Obviously retailers get reasonably optimistic ... you think that maybe this year will be better than expectations."

While retailers had passed the annual peak, the end of January brought with it summer season sales for clothing retailers and back-to-school trade.

Mr Albertson said while retailers were not predicting 2013 to be an easy year, there were signs the market was improving. December spending was up for the third month in a row.

Topics:  business


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