Slide background

Scroll down to view the article

Easter trading season
offers retailers a glimpse of
blue sky amid a perfect
economic storm

Easter trading season offers retailers a glimpse of blue sky amid a perfect economic storm
Scroll down to view the article
APPLY NOW

Get Capital

Please fill in all required fields*
date_time
id
akza120
uniq id
created
Pageurl
Ref
Year
Month
Month Name
form
The Connect Group wishes to send you info by means of electronic communication about our services, including cash management, card payments, prepaid solutions and access to business funding, and share your details with the other entities within the Connect Group for this purpose. For more info, email marketing@connected.co.za.
If you consent, please select the box.
Campaigns
IP address
Type of Phrasing
utm_source
utm_campaign
utm_medium
utm_content
source_new_capital
Hot Lead
All personal information is processed in accordance with our Privacy Policy
Johannesburg, 6 April 2022: South African retailers are set for a strong Easter trading season, with general dealers, clothing and textiles stores, as well as specialist food, beverages and tobacco retailers expected to be among the strongest who will gain.

The 2022 Easter trading period, which will stretch over around 35 days, and is forecasted for a 6.9% year-over-year increase in retail sales, which implies that the economic recovery is gaining traction despite the perfect economic storm which could be to the benefit of retailers with the right mindsets, strategies and actions to make the most of these first green shoots.

That’s according to the latest Easter Retail research study that was released today by Capital Connect, the fintech business funding division within The Connect Group. The research shows that end-of-season sales, Easter-related promotions and school holidays all help to drive an uptick in retail trade over the Easter period. However, not all retailers will benefit equally.

“A strong Easter trading season will give South African retailers some respite in a year they are facing a perfect economic storm, with high unemployment, weak economic growth and the return of inflation impacting consumer and business confidence,” says Steven Heilbron, CEO of Capital Connect.

“Agile retailers that invest in promotions, new offerings and more diverse product ranges will be best positioned to profit from this trading period, especially if they take advantage of the opportunity capital at their disposal from alternative lenders. Given the pressure on the consumer’s wallet and the steep competition in the market, retailers will need to be smarter, faster and more creative than the rest to win the consumer’s business.”

According to the Bureau of Market Research who conducted this research study, Easter trade will impact different segments of retail in the following ways:

  • General dealers generally benefit from Easter sales and this year is expected to be no different. With high unemployment and consumer income under pressure due to the perfect economic storm, much of that spend will come from consumers buying necessities in bulk during sales and promotions.
  • Retailers of food, beverages and tobacco in specialised stores have experienced volatile Easter trade since the pandemic started, and this as a result of alcohol and beverage bans. This year however, those retailers with strong confectionary and deli offerings are expected to do well.
  • Retailers of textiles, clothing, footwear and leather goods are expected to enjoy a seasonal boost due to workers buying clothes to take home for the Easter season, as well as buy end of season sales.
  • Retailers in pharmaceutical and medical goods, as well as cosmetics and toiletries enjoyed a boost in April 2020 due to panic buying. However, they do not customarily see a spike in sales over Easter. Hardware, paint and glass retailers also tend not to gain at this time of the year.

Carel van Aardt, Professor and Research Director at Unisa’s Bureau of Market Research, says that Easter retail trading patterns differ significantly from those seen over Black Friday and the festive season, when consumers spend more money on big-ticket items like electronics and appliances. Over Easter, the hot sellers typically include high-volume goods like food, alcoholic beverages, confectionaries and clothes.

“To increase margins and sales, retailers need to really understand what the customer wants and deliver it as quickly, cheaply and with the highest possible quality level. They also need to innovate and diversify,” he says.
“Smart advertising executions and in-store experiences such as shopper-tainment are key to creating a wow factor that brings shoppers into your store.”

Heilbron adds: “Whether it’s buying goods in bulk to create compelling specials for the price-sensitive shopper, moving into ecommerce and home delivery, or adding a deli and coffee shop to the mix, retailers can ignite growth in so many ways. The capital they need to fund growth is readily available from innovative fintechs, without delays and paperwork that’s generally associated with traditional lenders.”