Actual Previous
Month over Month 0.5% 0.5%
Year over Year 1.3% 1.3%

Highlights

Retail activity in November 2025 showed cautious but broad-based improvement, signalling a gradual recovery in consumer demand. Seasonally adjusted sales rose by 0.5 percent in value and 0.6 percent in volume compared with October, indicating that higher spending was supported by genuine increases in quantities purchased rather than price effects alone. On an annual basis, growth remained modest, with retail sales up 1.3 percent in value and 0.5 percent in volume, suggesting a restrained but resilient consumer environment.

Performance diverged across retail formats. Large-scale distribution continued to outperform, recording a 2.1 percent year-over-year increase, likely reflecting pricing power, wider product ranges, and stronger logistical capacity. In contrast, small-scale retailers and non-store sales experienced declines, pointing to persistent pressures on smaller operators and possible shifts in consumer shopping habits. Online sales stood out, expanding by 8.3 percent compared with a year earlier, underlining the continued structural shift towards digital retail channels.

Product-level trends further reinforce this picture. Non-food items generally recorded positive growth, with cosmetics and toilet articles leading at nearly 6 percent, suggesting stable discretionary spending on personal care. Overall, the data point to steady, uneven progress rather than a strong retail rebound.

Definition

Retail sales measure the total receipts at stores that sell durable and nondurable goods. The headline data are expressed in nominal terms but volume statistics are also available. Autos are excluded. Only a very limited breakdown of subsector performance is available in the first report but much greater detail is provided in the following month's release. The Italian National Institute of Statistics (Istat) is the main producer of official statistics in Italy.

Description

With consumer spending a large part of the economy, market players continually monitor spending patterns. Retail sales are a measure of consumer well-being. 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 goes overboard and leads to inflation. Ideally, the economy walks that fine line between strong growth and excessive (inflationary) growth.

optional tags
topic/economic-research, topic/product-research
Upcoming Events