Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | Revised | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Retail Sales - M/M | 0.3% | -0.1% to 0.5% | 0.7% | 0.6% | 0.8% |
Ex-Vehicles - M/M | 0.2% | 0.1% to 0.6% | 0.6% | 0.6% | 0.9% |
Ex-Vehicles & Gas - M/M | 0.1% | -0.5% to 0.3% | 0.6% | 0.2% | 0.3% |
Highlights
Sales of motor vehicles are up 1.0 percent in September, providing support to the overall number. Sales excluding motor vehicles are up 0.6 percent in September, above the consensus of up 0.2 percent in the Econoday survey of forecasters.
Sales of gasoline saw price increases in September that boosted the dollar value by 0.9 percent in the month. Nonetheless, sales were strong overall in September. Retail sales excluding gasoline are up 0.7 percent in September, while sales excluding motor vehicles and gasoline are up 0.6 percent.
There are decreases of 0.8 percent for both electronics and appliances and also clothing stores in September. Building materials are down 0.2 percent in September. Sales of sporting goods are unchanged. Elsewhere sales had moderate increases. In particular, miscellaneous retailers see an increase of 3.0 percent, nonstore retailers are up 1.1 percent, and food services are up 0.9 percent in September.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Definition
Description
The pattern in consumer spending is often the foremost influence on stock and bond markets. For stocks, strong economic growth translates to healthy corporate profits and higher stock prices. For bonds, the focus is whether economic growth becomes excessive and leads to inflation. Ideally, the economy walks that fine line between strong growth and excessive (inflationary) growth. Retail sales not only give you a sense of the big picture, but also the trends among different types of retailers. Perhaps auto sales are especially strong or apparel sales are showing exceptional weakness. These trends from the retail sales data can help you spot specific investment opportunities, without having to wait for a company's quarterly or annual report.
Balance was achieved through much of the nineties. For this reason alone, investors in the stock and bond markets enjoyed huge gains during the bull market of the 1990s. Retail sales growth did slow down in tandem with the equity market in 2000 and 2001, but then rebounded at a healthy pace between 2003 and 2005. By 2007, the credit crunch was well underway and starting to undermine growth in consumer spending. Later in 2008 and 2009, the rise in unemployment and loss of income during the recession also cut into retail sales. Spending rebounded in 2010 and 2011 but was constrained by lingering high unemployment.
Importance
Retail sales are a major indicator of consumer spending trends because they account for nearly one-half of total consumer spending and approximately one-third of aggregate economic activity. The control group for retail sales (which excludes restaurants, vehicles, gasoline and building materials) is an input into GDP and offers a narrower look at nondiscretionary spending.
Interpretation
Strong retail sales are bearish for the bond market, but favorable for the stock market, particularly retail stocks. Sluggish retail sales could lead to a bond market rally, but will probably be bearish for the stock market.
Retail sales are subject to substantial month-to-month variability. In order to provide a more accurate picture of the consumer spending trend, follow the three-month moving average of the monthly percent changes or the year-over-year percent change. Retail sales are also subject to substantial monthly revisions, which makes it more difficult to discern the underlying trend. This problem underscores the need to monitor the moving average rather than just the latest one month of data.
In an attempt to avoid the more extreme volatility, economists and financial market participants monitor retail sales less autos (actually less auto dealers which include trucks, too.) Motor vehicle sales are excluded not because they are irrelevant, but because they fluctuate more than overall retail sales. In recent years, many analysts consider the core series to be total less autos and less gasoline service station sales. The latter is volatile due to swings in oil and gasoline prices.
Price changes affect the real value of retail sales. Watch for changes in food and energy prices which could affect two large components among nondurable goods stores: food stores and gasoline service stations. Large declines in food or energy prices could lead to declines in store sales which are due to price, not volume. This would mean that real sales were stronger than nominal dollar sales.
Since economic performance depend on real, rather than nominal growth rates, compare the trend growth rate in retail sales to that in the CPI for commodities.