(Reuters) - Retail sales volumes fell last month for the first time since January, a sign that consumer demand may be slipping ahead of planned government spending cuts.
The Office for National Statistics said sales volumes fell 0.5 percent in August, surprising analysts who had forecast a modest increase and backtracking after several months of resilient growth.
On the year, retail sales volumes rose just 0.4 percent -- only a fifth of the 2.0 percent that analysts had forecast.
Sterling hit session lows against the euro and the dollar after the report, which also showed hefty downward revisions to July's figures.
"August's fall in retail sales could be the first sign that the surprising resilience of consumer spending could be coming to an end," said Vicky Redwood at Capital Economics.
"The pressures on consumers are clearly mounting."
Although results of retailers have generally started to improve following the recession, many experts think the sector faces a harsh winter as the government cuts spending and raises taxes to rein in a record public deficit.
Bellwether retailer John Lewis said trading conditions would likely get tougher as tax hikes and public spending cuts hit shoppers, as it reported a 28 percent rise in first-half profit.
Kingfisher, Europe's biggest home improvement retailer, beat first-half profit forecasts, helped by cost-cutting and business improvements. But it too saw tougher times ahead.
http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE68F1A220100916
Hum, GBP/USD down lousy 0.17 %, FTSE down lousy 0.08 %. Where are good, old days when there were 1-2 % down moves on such news ???? 