The National Accounts for the March 2026 quarter paint a picture of slower household income growth, but consistent spending trends. Income growth of 5% matched broader consumer spending and retail spending trends. The consumer’s initial response to higher interest rates and petrol prices has been to save a bit less. Given savings are a healthy 6%-7% of income, we expect savings to delay the downturn in retail and see a trough in retail sales growth at close to 3% in the December 2026 quarter.
The RBNZ remains on hold while the RBA has already raised rates three times this year. New Zealand retail sales began recovering in the September quarter 2025 and the income backdrop remains good for NZ consumers despite the risk of higher inflation and interest rates. We forecast New Zealand retail sales growth to hold at 4.2% over FY27e, with 3.6% growth in at-home food & liquor and 4.6% in non-food retail. The retail sales cycle in New Zealand may be more uncertain in FY27e, but the long-dated impact of rate cuts is still a tailwind, along with improving net migration and employment growth. Key retailers that have earnings upside in NZ are Ampol, Woolworths and Harvey Norman. To a lesser extent, JB Hi-Fi and Nick Scali will see upside to earnings but both have a very small store network.
New Zealand has been a challenging retail market for most companies over the past 18 months. However, there are clear signs retail sales are likely to improve. Rate cuts of 250bp that began in August 2024 are starting to boost incomes and recent sales trends have been stronger. We expect NZ retail spending to rebound to 3.6% growth in FY26e, up from 0.6% growth in FY25. The three retailers with the largest sales exposure and upside to better NZ sales trends are Ampol, Harvey Norman and Bapcor. NZ could account for 2%-3.5% in operating profit growth for these companies.