Online mobile sales falter as summer comes to a close
UK online retail sales held steady this August, as shopper spending achieved +12.8% growth year-on-year (YoY) according to the latest IMRG Capgemini e-Retail Sales Index, in line with the three and twelve month rolling averages of +12.8% and +12.9%, but below the three-month average of +15.3%.
M-retail (smartphones and tablets) growth hit an all-time low of just +10% YoY. While smartphone growth still came in at +26.7%, it was the lowest growth since September 2014, and a significant drop on last August’s +53.6%. Multichannel m-retail growth only just stayed above water with +1% YoY growth, while online-only m-retail growth was up 15% YoY.
Garden finally slowed down after enjoying blockbuster growth from this year’s heatwave, coming in at just +2.8% YoY growth, down -43% against July. This sits in stark contrast to the previous 3-month average of +37.5% YoY. Beauty, conversely, had a strong month coming in at +25.3% YoY. Lastly, clothing had a mixed month, coming in at just +5.4 YoY. Curiously, Menswear experienced +18.6% growth versus just +3% for women.
Bhavesh Unadkat, principal consultant in retail customer engagement, Capgemini, said:
“We were expecting a much bigger downturn in August than we got given the effect of the hot summer and events boosting sales in the previous months. The index was down on last month by less than 2%, the lowest decline compared to last four years, and therefore one of best performance we’ve had coming out of July.
“The August performance was largely driven by an uplift in the final week during the August bank holiday weekend; where we started to see a change in the weather, potentially driving autumn-wear and new season growth. Basket values in clothing however, were 11% lower than last year, which could be a result of heavier promotional activity as retailers continue to claim share-of-wallet categories such as Beers, Wines and Spirits and Electricals had a poorer month, demonstrating underlying revenue is coming more from core and necessity products as a trend rather than luxurious items.”
Andy Mulcahy, strategy and insight director, IMRG, said:
“The main driver of growth in our index over the past few years has been smartphone devices; throughout 2016 sales growth through these devices was typically in the 75-100% range, then in 2017 it gradually slowed down to be in the 40-60% range, then as we’ve entered 2018 it has continued to decline. This is expected, as very high growth cannot usually be sustained for long periods, but in August three points of note happened.
“The first was that smartphone sales growth was at its lowest rate since September 2014; August 2018 was also the first time it has fallen below the 30% mark since then. The second was that, looking at mobile devices overall (smartphone and tablets combined), growth was at its lowest ever rate since we started tracking it in 2012. And finally, the weak performance seems to be attributed to the multichannel retailers, who recorded overall mobile device growth of just 1%, while for the online-only retailers it was up 15%.”