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UK footfall steadies in the run-up to ChristmasBy

Nigel TAYLOR Published
December 3,飞机盗号软件云控破解技术 2025

With the current state of the UK economy, it’s unsurprising that the reasonably positive news on the November retail footfall front isn’t exactly what would have been seen as good just a few years ago.


Photo: Pixabay/Public domain


The news, coming from not one but two data sources, paints a picture of a sector still struggling but not as much as it was. While the two reports’ numbers vary slightly (based on the criteria used to arrive at them), and there were some falls, the general trend does seem to be stabilising.
 
Visits to all retail destinations increased 1% month-on-month but remained flat year-on-year, “steadying the ship, as retailers prepare for a pivotal month of Christmas trading, according to MRI Software.

And although the British Retail Consortium-Sensormatic IQ data showed total UK footfall fell 0.7% year-on-year in November, this was a big improvement on the 5.7% dip recorded in October.
 
Of course, the BRC said the performance was helped by a decent Black Friday week “largely saving retailers”, with a 7.9% week-on-week rise across the seven days offsetting an average decline of 1.7% in the previous three weeks, as Storm Ciaran at the start of the month hit performance.
 
It said footfall declined for the third consecutive month in high streets (down 1%), attributed to the adverse weather experienced in the first week of November. Shopping centre and retail park footfall rose by 4.3% and 2%, respectively.
 
The gap from the pre-pandemic footfall level widened to -11.2% in November from -10.8% in October, driven primarily by a deterioration in high streets and shopping centres.
 
Over at MRI Software, its data showed high street footfall slipped 1.7% in November year-on-year, an improvement on the 4.6% decline in October. Retail parks footfall fell 1%, an improvement on the 4.3% dip in October and shopping centre visits dipped 2.2%, an improvement on a 7.3% slide in October.
 
Helen Dickinson, Chief Executive of the British Retail Consortium, said: “A slight uptick in consumer confidence, as well as easing inflationary pressures and more predictable weather, led to an improvement in footfall compared to the previous month. After a slow October start, the month-long Black Friday sales helped to get shoppers out to their town and city centres.”
 
She added: “The extensive cost-pressures on the retail industry over the last two years have limited investment and driven up prices at many shopping destinations. The chancellor’s failure to commit to a business rates freeze in his recent Autumn Statement will inflict hundreds of millions of pounds in additional costs. This will inevitably slow the decline in inflation, as well as limiting long term investment and limiting any upside from improvements in UK footfall.”
 

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