Since we last published our retail forecasts in January 2026, a lot has changed. Higher petrol prices and interest rates will lead to slower retail growth. We forecast retail sales growth of 4.0% for 2026, which is a revision down from 4.5% previously. On the surface it looks like a mild revision. However, the slowdown for non-food retail and dining out is larger at a one percentage point. Discretionary spending growth could slow by 3% by December 2026. The offsets to a more negative stance are higher inflation in food categories, unemployment remains low and households have savings buffers to deal with the pressures. There is a bear case where spending turns negative, but that requires recessionary conditions and an unsympathetic RBA and government.
In our view, the Australian retail sales cycle just passed its peak in the December 2025 quarter at 6% growth. We forecast retail sales growth of 4.5% in 2026. While a moderation from the recent peak, without further house price growth, households will be less willing to use their savings to drive retail spending. Our forecast of 4.5% growth is just below long-term trends. While interest rate movements will be topical, unless there are multiple rises, the shift in the Australian dollar and house prices will be more impactful on retail spending than any rate rise itself.