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Retail sales rise at fastest rate for seven years

German retailers reported a surprisingly strong increase in business at the start of the year, official data showed on Friday, with sales rising at their fastest rate for seven years.

Retail sales rise at fastest rate for seven years
Photo: DPA

Retail sales, a closely watched measure of household confidence, increased by 2.5 percent in January compared with December, the federal statistics office Destatis said in a statement.

That was the strongest increase since February 2007, the statisticians said.
   
Retail sales had dropped by two percent in December and analysts had been forecasting a much more modest increase for January.
   
On a 12-month basis, business increased by 0.9 percent in January compared with the same month last year, the statisticians calculated.
   
Retail sales data are subsequent to frequent revision, but following a rise in a key consumer confidence index earlier this week, analysts said the outlook for household spending in Germany looks positive.
   
"German households began the new year 2014 on an optimistic note according to confidence surveys and the hard data reflect that," said Berenberg Bank economist Christian Schulz.
   
The GfK consumer confidence barometer rose in February and is projected to rise again in March.
   
"The outlook for consumption in Germany is bright and the January data hint at the potential. 
 
A strong labour market, low inflation and an improving economic outlook give households the confidence and means to spend more," Schulz said.
   
"We expect private consumption to be a robust driver of economic growth this year, which could make a strong start into 2014 according to the data received so far," the expert said.
   
Natixis economist Johannes Gareis agreed.
   
The data "underline our scenario that private consumption continues to play a prominent role in Germany's economy this year, after it lost steam in the fourth quarter," he said.
   
"All in all, upbeat consumer confidence, lower unemployment, lower price inflation, and record-low interest rates should clearly translate into more consumer spending in Germany this year," Gareis said.
   
Annalisa Piazza at Newedge Strategy said that households were seeing the benefit of a resilient labour market and some improvement in their disposable income.
   
"Lower inflation, coupled with rising employment and rising income growth, represent solid pre-conditions for a rebound in consumer spending in the first quarter," she said.
   
"That said, we rule out that German retail sales will continue to rise at the same pace in the remainder of the quarter. Indeed, the series remains very volatile and the January increase might be seen also as a technical correction after the dismal pre-Christmas retail activity," Piazza said.
 

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SHOPPING

Danish stores to remove MobilePay from payment options

Over 500 shops in Denmark will no longer offer the popular app MobilePay as a payment option after the platform ordered merchants to purchase new hardware.

Danish stores to remove MobilePay from payment options

The Dagrofa corporation, which owns chains including the Meny and Spar supermarkets, has announced it will remove MobilePay as a payment option in its stores, business media Finans reports.

The decision could impact less than 1 percent of payments in the store which are currently made using MobilePay, the company said.

READ ALSO: 17 essential phone apps to make your life in Denmark easier

“The primary reason is that MobilePay will from now on demand a technical setup for the payment system in stores and with the investment that will neee, we have concluded that’s not the way we want to go,” Dagrofa’s head of communications Morten Vestberg told Finans.

Dagrofa owns the Let-Køb and Min Købmand convenience store chains in addition to Meny and Spar.

The decision will mean MobilePay is removed from some 530 stores altogether, although individual stores may choose to retain the payment app.

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