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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Retail bosses pin hopes on bumper golden quarter with three crucial dates

The final three months of the year, also known as the golden quarter, are make-or-break for retailers

Black Friday shoppers in Cardiff city centre(Image: John Myers)

The final three months of the year, often termed as the golden quarter, hold critical importance for retailers. Despite a consistent downturn in retail spending this year or reliance on discounts that heavily cut into margins, industry experts anticipate that pent-up consumer demand will provide a necessary uplift during the holiday season.

Amidst fluctuating consumer confidence, there is nonetheless a unanimous belief among retail specialists that this golden quarter encompassing key shopping dates such as Black Friday, Cyber Monday, and Christmas could spell the strongest retail performance since before the pandemic struck, as reported by .

Retail consultant Miya Knights said that an "increase in spending power for many people", coupled with "pent-up demand from consumers holding off larger purchases until the promotional period" should bolster retail fortunes.

A survey conducted amongst the sector's pundits also referenced moderating inflation, higher wages, and solid savings accumulations as positive signs of a vibrant holiday trading period. Furthermore, Nick Bubb of Bubb Retail Consultancy suggested the anticipated fourth-quarter sales resurgence is partly due to "a replacement cycle that is underway on all the technology that was bought by consumers for working at home during the pandemic."

He noted that "Retailers will look to capitalise on that ahead of Christmas, helped by the stimulus from lower interest rates and new AI-linked product launches."

Jonathan De Mello, founder and CEO of JDM Retail, pointed out that despite the economic challenges many households face, "demand for Taylor Swift and Oasis tickets, [plus] electronics purchases related to the sporting action at the start of the summer, are examples that when the desire... is there, there's still plenty of consumers willing and able to spend."

A fly in the ointment?

However, potential obstacles remain. While further cuts to the base interest rate in November and December could bolster consumer confidence, tax increases announced in the Autumn budget could undermine it.

Consumer confidence took a hit in September ahead of the budget, with Labour's bleak narrative about the black hole in public finances and media speculation about how this deficit might be addressed impacting attitudes nationwide.