British retail sales unexpectedly rose in January as shoppers took advantage of aggressive price cuts to stock up on new clothes, books and CDs in the post-Christmas sales, official data showed today.
The Office for National Statistics said sales rose 0.7 per cent last month and by 3.6 per cent on the year. Analysts had forecast a monthly fall of 0.1 per cent.
On a three-monthly basis, sales were up 1.5 per cent, the highest rate since May last year.
The pound shot up more than half a cent against the dollar after the much stronger-than-expected figures but economists said they still expected the Bank of England to deliver further monetary stimulus to support the recession-hit economy.
“Anecdotal evidence suggests January spending started off very strong but tailed off as the clearance sales ended," said Vicky Redwood of Capital Economics.
"We continue to think that consumer spending will fall by around 3.5 per cent in real terms this year.” The ONS said the main drivers of sales in January were the “textiles, clothing and footwear" and "other stores” categories after widespread discounting.
But prices were on average only 1 per cent lower than a year ago. In December they were 2.8 per cent lower, as retailers feared a bad Christmas.
Sales at textile, clothing and footwear stores jumped 6.1 per cent on the month, the biggest rise since May 2008. Sales at other stores, such as books and CD sellers, shot up by 6 per cent, the biggest monthly increase since January 1988.
The ONS said it believed it had now resolved the seasonal adjustment problems that had dogged the December data and did not expect any significant revisions.