|
Monday 24th December 2012 |
Text too small? |
New Zealanders spent 2.6 percent more in the week leading up to Christmas this year than they did a year ago, due mainly to a resurgent Canterbury region that wasn't reeling from yet another earthquake.
Retail spending rose to $1.33 billion in the week ended Dec. 23, from $1.29 billion in the same week a year earlier, according to Paymark figures, which account for about three quarters of all electronic transactions. Almost a third of that increase came from Canterbury which registered an 8 percent left from a year ago when the country's second-biggest city was dealing with a major earthquake.
"Canterbury has really steamed ahead of the other regions in terms of spending growth in the lead up to Christmas," Paymark chief executive Steve Tong said in a statement. "In the past few days we've seen the spending growth rate decelerate slightly to become more in line with the average growth rate over the past 11 months."
The figures come after government figures this month showed sales on electronic cards rose 0.5 percent in November, led by spending on hospitality.
Today's Paymark figures reported a 1.9 percent increase in Auckland/Northland spending to $520 million, while Wellington showed a 1.6 percent fall to $128.6 million.
BusinessDesk.co.nz
No comments yet
HGH Ltd Results for the 6 months ended 1 February 2026
March 27th Morning Report
CDC investor presentation and guidance update
PFI - Potential Bond Offer by PFI
MCY - Mercury Green Bond offer - interest rate set
March 25th Morning Report
AFT - Chief Financial Officer update
KMD Brands: Response to Stokehouse transaction concept
March 24th Morning Report
MCY - Mercury launches retail Green Bond offer