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.
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?
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.
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.
Australian retail sales growth has been on an improvement path since March 2024. Retail sales growth for FY25 was 3.3%, better than the 1.8% in FY24. We see retail spending accelerating further to 3.9% in FY26e. Why not a stronger improvement given interest rate cuts? Given tax cuts and strong wages growth during FY25, income growth will actually slow in FY26e making it hard to see much acceleration in retail sales. If retail growth is stronger than our forecast in FY26e, it is likely driven by households dipping into savings if house prices rise substantially.
We have updated our forecasts for the Australian retail sales outlook. Despite significant global uncertainties created by US tariffs, Australian consumers have taken it in their stride. We forecast retail sales growth for 2025 of 3.4% (prev 3.6%). Our downgrade in growth is only for supermarkets and liquor with softer volumes and price inflation. Non-food retail has started the year strongly, particularly in household goods and online. The strength in retail sales is largely attributable to strong household income growth and the drivers of this elevated growth will be difficult to sustain given the magnitude of recent tax cuts and outsized population growth. A better backdrop would require consumers to save even less. We expect sales growth of 4% beyond 2025.
Most retailers have highlighted how much tougher their NZ operations have been over the past year. The magnitude of the interest rate pain combined with lower levels of household savings has created a much tougher backdrop. However, conditions are improving and rate cuts have been significant with more to come. NZ retail sales should recover over 2025, more so in the second-half. We have pulled together a chart pack that provides a perspective on the NZ economic outlook, retail sales forecasts and financial performance of major retailers in that market. We include both ASX-listed retailers and NZ-centric retailers.
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.
Australian retail sales growth finished 2024 better than where it started, and the good news is we are likely to see a stronger growth rate for 2025. We forecast 3.6% retail sales growth this year, up from 2.6% in 2024. We see a stronger recovery in non-food retail, particularly household goods. While a good year, much of the support to spending comes from tax cuts and rate cuts, making it hard to see further gains beyond June 2026. Moreover, geopolitical risks (both positive and negative) feel larger this year. Both retailers and investors should have contingency plans.
We have updated our retail sales forecasts, which are modestly higher in FY25e and slightly lower in FY26e. We forecast FY25e retail sales growth of 3.2% (prev 2.9%) and the largest driver of our revisions is stronger non-food online sales growth. A retail recovery is underway, because this year has unquestionably strong household income growth, which sets a solid base for retail spending. However, households have a low savings rate, which detracts from the upswing. We expect a more notable pick up in household goods and online with softer sales in dining out for FY25e.