Published: 17:54, December 1, 2020 | Updated: 09:32, June 5, 2023
HK retail slump eases as new virus wave threat looms
By Bloomberg

A clothing store stands between shuttered retail spaces covered in rental advertisements in Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong, April 21, 2020. (ROY LIU / BLOOMBERG)

Hong Kong’s subdued retail environment showed signs of improvement in October, though a new wave of virus cases threatens that progress as the city tightened social-distancing rules again.

Retail sales by value fell 8.8 percent from a year earlier to HK$27.4 billion (US$3.5 billion), better than the median forecast of -10.3 percent in a Bloomberg survey of economists, and compared with a revised -12.8 percent in September. Sales by volume fell 9.3 percent.

Retail sales by value fell 8.8 percent from a year earlier to HK$27.4 billion (US$3.5 billion), better than the median forecast of -10.3 percent in a Bloomberg survey of economists, and compared with a revised -12.8 percent in September

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A resurgent wave of infections and new social-distancing restrictions, however, threaten to upend the nascent signs of an economic recovery. The new virus cases have already forced Hong Kong to delay a travel bubble with Singapore and worsens pressure on retailers ahead of the critical December shopping season.

“With the fourth wave of the local epidemic spreading widely and quickly, the business environment of the retail trade may deteriorate again in the near term,” the government said in its report Tuesday.

Sales by value of electrical goods and other consumer durables dropped almost 25 percent from a year ago, while food, alcohol and tobacco sales declined 6.5 percent. On the other hand, sales of goods in supermarkets rose 2.6 percent.

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Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor this week announced further mobility restrictions, including reducing public gatherings to two people, closing nightclubs and karaoke parlors and cracking down on parties aboard yachts in order to bring the latest virus wave under control. Schools will shut again from Wednesday.

Lam’s policy address, delivered last week, announced that HK$600 million was earmarked to help the tourism sector.