Friday, November 28, 2008
It's the restive season
Massive discounts are on the cards this festive season as South African retailers across the board brace themselves for the bleakest Christmas sales season in nearly two decades, experts say.
"Retailers will have to go all out this Christmas to entice consumers. I would not rule out big discounts from durables, semi-durables and non- durables retailers," Luke Doig, senior economist at Credit Guarantee Insurance Corporation, told I-Net Bridge in a phone interview in Friday.
Black Friday
Today, known as Black Friday in the US, marks the beginning of the traditional Christmas shopping season - putting retailers "in the black" - but sales forecasts for the season are gloomy, with Doig saying his initial forecast of a two percent real decline "looks optimistic" at this stage.
Supporting this forecast is this week's survey by the Bureau for Economic Research (BER) and Ernst & Young, which showed that 13 percent of the retailers expect lower sales volumes in Q4 2008, the weakest result since the 1992 festive season.
Retail sales, as released by the Statistics SA, have dropped every month since May, highlighting the distress faced by consumers given the lagged effects of interest rates hikes between June 2006 and June 2008 and uncomfortably high debt levels.
Meanwhile, earnings reports from several listed retailers show a common theme – slowing top line growth. This raises concerns about retailers' ability to implement steep price markdowns without affecting the quality of earnings.
Better volumes
"What are they going to do? Better volumes at the expense of margin? I think there is still room to give up some margin, otherwise they'd be sitting with high stock levels in January," said Doig.
According to BER/Ernst & Young survey, while more than three-quarters of the respondents raised prices in the third quarter, this came down to 61 percent in Q4, and less than 50 percent expect to increase prices in the first quarter of 2009.
"The combination of weak sales growth and reduced ability to raise prices amid falling commodity prices and weak consumer demand have seen retailer profitability decline to levels last seen in 2001/02," said Derek Engelbrecht, retail and consumer products director at Ernst & Young.
Fuel price declining
But with fuel prices declining, with the latest cut being a substantial R1.61 per litre, both the retailer and the consumer will have a little bit of extra cash this festive season.
Doig estimates that the fuel price cut in December will add an extra R2- billion, easing production costs for retailers and adding more muscle to fight for a slice of R10.3-billion estimated to be spent this holidays.
A snap website glance-through of major retailers showed that they are on furious promotional campaigns, with retail chains from Woolworths and Edgars to Game running massive shopping competitions.
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