UK retail sales grew by 4.2% in April, compared with the same month last year, with furniture and flooring emerging as the best performing category, according to the British Retail Consortium/KPMG retail sales index.
The British Retail Consortium's monthly report suggested sales were up 4.2% on a like-for-like basis in April on a year earlier as bank holiday shoppers bought furniture and snapped up clothing to suit the warmer weather.
But the numbers were distorted by the timing of Easter, which fell in March last year. The same holiday timing effect saw sales fall according to the report for March. Taking the last three months together to iron out distortions, like-for-like sales grew 0.3%, the weakest performance since December 2012.
Flooring and furniture sales grew at the fastest rate since April 2006, joining house textiles, clothing and footwear as strong performing categories.
According to the head of retail at KPMG, renewed confidence in the housing market is the reason why homeowners are making improvements to their properties. David McCorquodale said that although a late Easter had contributed to strong sales in April, the recovering economy was feeding through to non-food retail sales, which saw a 3.3% rise in the last quarter.
“Sales of furniture and flooring increased over the Easter break as consumers not only had the confidence to refresh their décor, but also to invest in big-ticket items,” he continued.
The British Retail Consortium's monthly report suggested sales were up 4.2% on a like-for-like basis in April on a year earlier as bank holiday shoppers bought furniture and snapped up clothing to suit the warmer weather.
But the numbers were distorted by the timing of Easter, which fell in March last year. The same holiday timing effect saw sales fall according to the report for March. Taking the last three months together to iron out distortions, like-for-like sales grew 0.3%, the weakest performance since December 2012.
The main drag came from food, with sales falling against a backdrop of supermarket discounting. Without food, like-for-like sales rose 2.2% over the three months to April.