logo
Consumer spending up 9% in May

Consumer spending up 9% in May

Irish Examiner15-06-2025
Consumer spending during May increased by 9%, compared to the same period last year, driven by additional spending on hotels, pubs, and concert tickets, data from AIB's Spend Trend shows.
According to the data, spending in hotels increased 8% year-on-year with Saturday, May 31, being the best day of the year for the sector, particularly in Dublin, likely driven by events such as Bloom and the VHI Women's Mini-Marathon.
Spending in pubs also increased 10% month-on-month, with the largest increase in spend in Limerick, up 16%, followed by Louth and Longford, up 15%.
The smallest increases were recorded in Wicklow, Roscommon, and Carlow, all of which were up 7%.
There was also a surge in ticket purchases on Friday, May 30, as Metallica tickets went on general sale for their two day Aviva Stadium concerts in June 2026. Ticket transactions were 76% above average on the day.
In addition, spending in cinemas increased 17%, compared to last year, with the release of two summer blockbusters Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning and Lilo and Stitch.
Other areas which saw an increase in spending during the month include groceries, which increased by 8% year on year; and hardware, up 6% year-on-year. Spending on electric car charging increased 83% year-on-year.
During the first five months of the year, overall consumer spending is also up 9% compared to the same period in 2024.
Adrian Moynihan, the head of consumer at AIB, said the increased spending by customers shows 'consumer confidence remains strong and is vital for businesses, enabling them to plan for both peak and off-peak periods throughout the year to effectively meet their customers' needs'.
In comparison to April, spending on clothing increased by 8% during May — with 73% of all clothing spending by women and 58% of it was in shops.
During the month, people in Cavan spent the most on clothes per transaction at €72.59, while people in Westmeath spent the least at €58.94.
The month of May also broke records for most card transactions by AIB customers with just over 80m.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European markets fall back as they await outcome of summit on Ukraine
European markets fall back as they await outcome of summit on Ukraine

Irish Times

time2 days ago

  • Irish Times

European markets fall back as they await outcome of summit on Ukraine

European shares came off multi-month highs on Friday, as declines in heavyweight tech and financial shares offset gains from some corporate earnings. Meanwhile, investors monitored a crucial summit between US president Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin over Ukraine. Investors hope the meeting could pave the way for a resolution of the Ukraine war, which has raged since February 2022. Dublin The Dublin market ended the week on a positive note, closing up half a per cent. Financial stocks were mixed on the day, with AIB and Bank of Ireland both edging lower by almost half a per cent each, while Permanent TSB was flat and insurer FBD gained 2.5 per cent to close at €14.35. READ MORE Food groups Kerry and Glanbia were both marginally lower, with Kerry down 0.13 per cent and Glanbia shedding 0.14 per cent. Insulation specialist Kingspan ended the week 1.7 per cent higher. Travel stocks rose, with Ryanair up 1.7 per cent and closing the day at €26.75. Shares in ferries group Irish Continental gained 1.45 per cent, closing the week at €5.60. London The FTSE 100 fell back after hitting a new all-time high to close lower on Friday. This was amid caution ahead of the US-Russia peace summit, hints of more tariffs and weak US consumer sentiment. The index closed down 38.34 points, 0.4 per cent, at 9,138.90. It had earlier reached an all-time intra-day high of 9,222.07. The FTSE 250 ended down 43.43 points, 0.2 per cent, at 21,758.24, and the AIM All-Share finished 0.86 of a point higher, 0.1 per cent, at 759.80. On the FTSE 100, mining stocks rose despite weak data from China. Anglo American rose 2.1 per cent, Glencore climbed 1.8 per cent and Antofagasta 1.2 per cent on hopes the soft figures will spark action from Chinese authorities. On a quiet day for company news, Associated British Foods ended up 0.2 per cent after confirming the acquisition of Hovis Group from private equity firm Endless. AB Foods plans to combine Hovis with its existing Allied Bakeries division to create a 'profitable UK bread business that is sustainable over the long term'. Europe The pan-European STOXX 600 index closed 0.1 per cent lower, after hitting a near five-month high earlier in the session. Aerospace and defence stocks fell 0.8 per cent ahead of the US-Russia summit on Ukraine. Technology stocks fell 0.6 per cent, weighing on the STOXX 600 index. ASML, the world's biggest supplier of computer chip-making equipment, fell 1 per cent after US peer Applied Materials lowered its fourth-quarter earnings forecast due to weak demand in China and impacts from tariff uncertainty. The Dutch firm had issued a similar warning in mid-July, saying it might not achieve its 2026 growth forecast. Chip stocks BE Semiconductor and ASMI dropped 3.3 per cent and 2.8 per cent, respectively. Healthcare shares, which have taken a beating this year from uncertainty around Trump's pharma tariffs, were on track for a recovery. The healthcare index logged its seventh consecutive session of gains, its longest streak since late January. Regional bourses were mixed, with Germany's DAX and the UK's FTSE declining, while France's CAC and Spain's IBEX posted gains. New York The Dow hit a record high earlier in the session, becoming the last of Wall Street's main indexes to soar to a new peak. Benchmark S&P 500 and the Nasdaq were losing ground, dragged down by technology, utilities and financials stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.09 per cent, the S&P 500 fell 0.25 per cent and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.36 per cent. Shares in Intel jumped more than 2 per cent by lunchtime on Friday, following a 7 per cent bounce the previous day, after reports that the Trump administration had discussed an unusual move to acquire an ownership stake as part of a plan to revive the troubled US chipmaker. Shares of UnitedHealth Group surged more than 13 per cent on Friday after billionaire Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway bought five-million shares of the company, providing a shot in the arm for investors who think the health conglomerate will turn around under its new CEO. - Additional reporting: Reuters, PA

Banks are making obscene profits – we should tax them to fund cost-of-living package, says Sinn Féin's Pearse Doherty
Banks are making obscene profits – we should tax them to fund cost-of-living package, says Sinn Féin's Pearse Doherty

Irish Independent

time3 days ago

  • Irish Independent

Banks are making obscene profits – we should tax them to fund cost-of-living package, says Sinn Féin's Pearse Doherty

AIB and Bank of Ireland have made combined profits of €5bn this year but will pay little or nothing in Irish corporation tax on the profits, Sinn Féin finance spokesman Pearse Doherty said. This is because they are allowed to carry forward losses incurred during the banking collapse and set them off against any corporation tax they owe. Mr Doherty called for the law to be changed to stop investors in the banks pocketing billions of euro in dividends. If the profits of the banks were fully taxed, it would fund energy credits for families this winter, he added. 'There is something rotten at the core of our economy when banks can extract €5bn in profits and pay essentially no tax,' Mr Doherty said. The two banks have a combined corporation tax liability of just €39m for 2024. Obscene profits have been made over the last year The Donegal TD said the Government needs to 'stop facilitating the banks to avoid paying taxes on profits' they have made off the back of ordinary workers. 'Obscene profits have been made over the last year as banks heaped more pressure on workers and families during a cost-of-living crisis,' he added. The Government has said it will not be paying out a cost-of-living package, which included energy credits last year, in this October's budget. Mr Doherty said: 'The two big banks in the State, AIB and Bank of Ireland, ­boasted a combined profit of €5bn in 2024. ADVERTISEMENT 'We know from their financial statements that they now plan to not pay fair taxes on these unjustified profits – profits that are just the result of jacking up mortgage rates and short-changing savers.' Mr Doherty referenced the ­annual report of Bank of Ireland, which he claimed shows it plans to pay less than 2pc of its profits in tax, just €31m in Irish corporation tax. 'But it gets worse,' he said. 'AIB plans to pay just 0.3pc in corporation tax, or just €8m, to the Irish public on the profits they made in 2024.' He claimed this means Bank of Ireland is avoiding €221m in taxes, and AIB is avoiding paying €319m, even under Ireland's generous corporate tax rate of 12.5pc. 'That's over half a billion euro that could be helping workers and families through the cost-of-living crisis that is being siphoned off into corporate coffers and investors' pockets.' He said AIB and Bank of Ireland avoid paying tax on their bumper profits by carrying forward losses they have incurred in the wake of the financial crash and the subsequent bailout. The bailout is a gift that keeps on giving Mr Doherty said Ireland is an outlier in effectively applying no limitation on corporations carrying forward losses. He said the ability of bailed-out banks to avoid paying tax should end. 'The bailout is a gift that keeps on giving. And the Irish public keeps on paying,' he said. 'Government-sanctioned corporate profiteering needs to end. 'Banks must be made to pay their fair share of taxes.' The Department of Finance said what it called 'loss relief for corporation tax' is a long-standing feature of the Irish corporate tax system and a standard feature of corporation tax systems in all Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. 'It recognises the fact that a business cycle runs over several years and that it would be unfair to tax income earned on profits in one year and not allow relief for losses incurred in another,' it said. Loss relief works by allowing a deduction for losses incurred in one accounting period against profits earned in another period. AIB said it is a very long-established part of Irish tax legislation that a business that makes a loss can offset that loss against its profits in later years and that is standard across all sectors. The bank added it adheres to all tax laws and rules and makes a significant tax contribution. 'In 2024, the total amount of taxes and levies paid and collected by AIB was €763m, with €376m of that paid by the group itself and a further €387m collected from employees, customers and shareholders, and paid over to the tax authorities,' it said. It said that as a result of changes announced by the finance minister in the budget in October 2023, AIB's bank levy payment has increased from €37m in 2023 to €94m in 2024, with a further levy of €94m to be paid in 2025. Bank of Ireland said that for last year, it will pay around €116m in Irish corporation taxes and levies made up of €31m in corporation tax and €85m for the bank levy. Since its introduction in 2014, Bank of Ireland has paid €404m for the bank levy. The group also pays taxes on profits generated in other jurisdictions. Bank of Ireland Group said, like any other company, it is allowed under the law and the tax codes to carry forward trading losses and utilise them against future trading profits. Changing the rules risks making Ireland a less attractive location for inward investment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store