Total Retail Spend is up for year on year (+2.8%)
Home & Building Supplies gained most (+12.5%)
Department Stores also saw growth (+6.9%)
Half of our regions showed an increase year on year
REGIONS UP THIS MONTH 8
CATEGORIES UP THIS MONTH 8
Fuel & Service Stations category continuing down (-6.6%)
Clothing & Footwear decreased year on year (-3.1%)
Of the eight regions showing decreases Tasman showed
the greatest drop of 4.3% followed by Marlborough at 4%
REGIONS UP THIS MONTH 3
CATEGORIES UP THIS MONTH 8
ONLINE RETAIL MARKET SUMMARY
SEPTEMBER 2015
Total online spend for the 28 days ending 28 August 2015 is $226 million which represents an increase vs the same
period last year of 0.21%. This gain is made up of a 5.7% increase in online spend with local New Zealand retailers and
incorporates a 6.6% drop in online spend with off shore merchants.
The strongest online sector overall remains Travel & Accommodation, which took 69.5% of total online spend. This
sector continues to see strong gains year on year of 10%. Positive year on year changes were recorded for Health
Goods & Services (+4.5%), Travel & Accommodation (+8.9%) and Liquor stores (+39.3%). The Home & Building
Supplies category recorded an impressive growth year on year of 57.2%, albeit from a very small base with online
spend representing only 1% of the category spend.
ONLINE: NZ VS OFF SHORE
NZ merchants accounted for 58.2% of Online in September, representing an increase of 2.2%.
Spend with off shore merchants saw decreases in September across all categories with the exception of two. The
Furniture / Appliances / Electronics category recorded an increase of 18.2% for off shore merchants (which was in
contrast to a decrease recorded for New Zealand merchants of this category of 71.1%). We also saw an increase in the
Health Goods & Services of 3.1% for the off shore proportion of on-line spend.
New Zealand merchants saw year on year growth for six categories with decreases in four. Of the decreasing on-line
spend in New Zealand Furniture / Appliances / Electronics saw the greatest decrease followed by Books & Stationary
Stores (-28.3%), Recreation & Entertainment (-16.3%) and a small decrease for Department stores (1.2%).