Retail sales growth slow to single-digits in July
Sentiment has soured amidst heating trade tensions.
The positive momentum of Hong Kong’s retail sector visibly slowed in July after headline sales figures booked the first single-digit expansion of 7.8% in 2018 following five straight months of double-digit growth, according to the Census & Statistics department.
This translates to $38.9b worth of purchases by shoppers in July.
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Heating trade tensions between the US and China may have contributed to souring consumer sentiment amongst locals and Mainland tourists, Chairman Thomson Cheng Wai-hung of the Hong Kong Retail Management Association told South China Morning Post. The weakening yuan could also pose a risk to Mainland spending by dampening the attractiveness of Hong Kong goods.
In a breakdown, the sales of jewellery, watches, clocks and valuable gifts led July’s purchases after rising 16.8% followed by fuels (15.2%) and medicines and cosmetics (12.7%).
Sales of department store commodities; motor vehicles and parts; and footwear, allied products and other clothing accessories also rose by 8.6%, 6.7% and 5.5% respectively over the same period.
On the other hand, the sales of books, newspapers, stationary and gifts dipped 1.4% in July.
Although sustained tourism figures are expected to support retail performance in the near term, the government has flagged key risks with the trade war as the most prominent. “|[C]onsumer sentiment may turn less sanguine going forward if the external uncertainties persist or escalate further,” a government spokesperson said in a statement.