The link provides a presentation associated with a webinar we held. The webinar addressed our retail sales forecasts for 2026. We addressed the outlook for the Australian retail sector in 2026 and beyond. The sector had a strong finish to 2025 but the outlook is more hazy with risks to both sales momentum and gross margins emerging.
The link provides a presentation associated with a webinar we held. The webinar addressed our retail sales forecasts for FY26. We addressed the crucial time for retailers that is the festive season and how trends may shift across retail categories. While the macro-economic backdrop is conducive, what will it take to see stronger sales growth?
We have made modest revisions to our retail sales forecasts. For FY26e, we forecast retail sales growth of 4.0% (prev 3.9%) and for FY27e 4.1% growth (unchanged). Non-food retail spending has been solid in the past six months and the trends are likely to continue into Christmas this year. However, we may see some shift in category performance in the new year as household goods slow, while fashion and takeaway food sales improve. Our upswing in retail sales is muted, which is a function of slowing household income growth and a low savings rates. We continue to monitor house prices closely as a source of upside risk if the wealth effect stimulates the use of previously stored-up savings.
The link provides a presentation associated with a webinar we held. The webinar addressed our retail sales forecasts for FY26e. The outlook remains constructive for retail spending in FY26e, interest rates are falling and tax cuts are providing stimulus for households, but population growth is slowing and income growth may not rise further from here. We assessed the willingness of consumers to dip into savings to drive retail spending higher.
The link provides a presentation associated with a webinar we held. The webinar addressed our retail sales forecasts for 2025. In the presentation, we answered some of the big questions on everyone’s minds, the impact of interest rate cuts, how elections impact spending and the outlook for retail sales across categories.
The outlook for retailers this festive season is constructive. Perhaps it is best characterised as a sign of the times where consumers are acting cautiously but do have money to spend. Therefore discounts are working. Black Friday event sales were likely up 4%-7% for many retailers based on our feedback. We expect the strongest growth was online. Amazon took share. Home appliances, fashion and beauty have done best. However, there are more discounts.