Retail sales were up 5.7% year-over-year in B.C. in September, according to Statistics Canada data released November 22, giving the province the second highest increase in the country, after Prince Edward Island (up 6.9%).
Compared with August, sales were up 0.9% in B.C.
Across Canada, retail sales increased 2.5% year-over-year and 0.6% compared with August. The nationwide gain was due to a 2.4% jump sales of motor vehicles and parts in September. This was the sector’s first increase in three months. Excluding this sector, however, retail sales across Canada were flat.
Gasoline sales increased 0.9% across Canada due to higher pump prices. General merchandise sales increased 0.4%, reversing a loss in August.
Food and beverage sales fell 0.8% due to lower sales at grocery stores (down 0.7%) and liquor stores (down 1.8%). As well, food prices decreased 0.9% year-over-year, which was the first yearly decline in this category since March 2008.
Douglas Porter, chief economist for BMO Financial Group, said increases across the country were very much a “regional story.”
“The weakest sales in the country are in the three oil-producing provinces, with Alberta sales down 2.4% year-over-year, followed by tiny gains in Saskatchewan (up 0.2%) and Newfoundland (up 0.6%),” Porter said in a note to investors.
“At the top of the spectrum, the three provinces leading the way in job growth are also, not surprisingly, leading the way in retail spending growth. After tiny PEI, the leaders are B.C., Quebec (up 3.7%) and Ontario (up 2.9%).”
The Canadian dollar dipped four-tenths of a cent on the data release, settling around 74.35 cents U.S. as of press time. Nick Exarhos, economist at CIBC, said this was in reaction to the “disappointing” ex-autos numbers.
“Volumes were up by a solid 0.6% in September, but that won’t change the monthly GDP outlook much after we already had weak readings in the books for manufacturing and wholesale trade,” Exarhos said. “As a result, we’re likely headed for relatively unchanged reading for monthly output.
“We’re expecting more out of shoppers heading into the fourth quarter, since it’s unlikely families will stash away the entirety of those family benefit cheques which are boosting year-on-year disposable income growth by around 0.5%.”
@EmmaHampelBIV