sunny.png
Monday May 29th, 2023 11:04AM

December retail sales fall 1.1% as inflation takes a toll

By The Associated Press

NEW YORK (AP) — Americans cut back on spending in December, the second consecutive month they've done so, underscoring how inflation and the rising cost of using credit cards slowed consumer activity over the crucial holiday shopping season.

Retail sales fell a worse-than-expected 1.1% in December, following a revised 1% drop in November, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday. In October, retail sales ticked up 1.3%, helped by early holiday shopping

Auto sales declined as rising interest rates for auto loans crimped demand. That, and falling gas prices, helped to pull overall retail sales lower. The December figure marked the biggest monthly decline in 2022.

The Fed raised its key interest rate in December for the seventh time in 2022 for exactly that reason as it tries to cool spending and inflation.

Excluding sales from auto and gasoline, retail sales slipped 0.7%. Retail sales are not adjusted for inflation unlike many other government reports. Higher prices inflate sales, while lower prices push sales down. December spending may also have been trimmed by an early start to the shopping season after last year's supply chain mess.

Also on Wednesday, the National Retail Federation, the nation's largest retail group, said holiday sales in November and December rose a weaker-than-expected 5.3%, based on its calculations of the government figures. It was a dramatic slowdown from the 2021 holiday season when sales spiked 13.5%.

“There are cracks appearing in the resiliency that consumers have shown in 2022, as higher prices, interest rate increases and the uncertainty of the macroeconomic environment finally take their toll,” Moody’s Vice President Mickey Chadha said.

Low unemployment and wage gains have so far supported consumer spending, but Chadha said in coming months, Moody's expects consumers to be increasingly “selective" in their spending in the first half of the year.

That has already hit some retailers hard like Party City, the event supply chain, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Tuesday. Yet it is being felt almost across the spectrum.

According to the data released Wednesday, sales dropped 1.1% at electronics and appliance stores; furniture and home furnishing stores saw a 2.5% drop. And department stores suffered a 6.6% decline. Sales at online retailers fell 1.1%. Restaurants also saw a drop. Painful price hikes for food have cooled a bit and there was a slight increase in sales last month.

Solid hiring, rising pay, and savings beefed up by government financial support during the pandemic enabled most Americans to keep up with rising prices. That government assistance has long ended, however, and some Americans have dipped into savings accounts since then. Credit card defaults are on the rise with some households slow to adjust their spending to a new reality.

Still, the job market continues to be a pillar of strength in the U.S. economy and wages continue to rise, creating a conflict for the Fed which needs to cool spending and hiring to control inflation.

Inflation does appear, at least at the moment, to be in retreat. Inflation fell to 6.5% in December, the sixth consecutive month of declines.

On a monthly basis, prices actually slipped 0.1% from November to December, the first such drop since May 2020.

There has been a pushback from consumers that have grown weary of rising prices, forcing retailers to cut prices to clear inventory.

Macy’s tempered its quarterly sales outlook this month and Lululemon warned that fourth quarter profit margins will be squeezed.

Major retailers including Walmart and Target release details on their fourth-quarter performances next month.

Jack Kleinhenz, chief economist at the National Retail Federation, expects companies to manage inventories more tightly in 2023 after being forced into heavy discounts last year.

“I think they are going to be very cautious because of what happened,” Kleinhenz said.

Petco CEO Ron Coughlin told the AP this week that shoppers had pulled back things like toys for their pets, though there has been something of a thaw as prices have stabilized. Still, Coughlin plans to be cautious on inventory.

“We are making sure we are ready for any scenario that comes, whether it's no recession, a light recession or a heavier recession," Coughlin said. "At the same time....we need to make sure we have the right product that people are looking for."

The retail data released Wednesday covers only about a third of overall consumer spending and doesn’t include services such as haircuts, hotel stays and plane tickets.

__

AP Economics writer Chris Rugaber in Washington contributed to this report.

____

Follow Anne D’Innocenzio on Twitter

  • Associated Categories: Associated Press (AP), AP Business
© Copyright 2023 AccessWDUN.com
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.
Ukraine helicopter crash kills interior minister, others
Authorities say a helicopter carrying Ukraine’s interior minister and other government officials has crashed into a kindergarten near the capital of Kyiv, killing him and about a dozen other people, including a child on the ground
10:58AM ( 8 minutes ago )
US, Chinese officials discuss climate, economy, relationship
U_S_ Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has met with her Chinese counterpart and pledged an effort to manage differences and “prevent competition from becoming anything ever near conflict.”
10:57AM ( 8 minutes ago )
Shooting by 6-year-old raises complex cultural questions
Even in a country where gun violence is commonplace, the story of a small boy with a gun is reverberating in a big way
10:55AM ( 11 minutes ago )
Associated Press (AP)
Opening statements begin in Elon Musk Tesla tweets trial
Opening statements are set to begin in a trial that will determine whether Tesla CEO Elon Musk cheated investors by asserting in 2018 tweets that he had lined up financing to take the electric automaker private
10:06AM ( 59 minutes ago )
76ers, Devils owners buy into Ripken, Cooperstown baseball
Cal Ripken and Cooperstown are connected again
9:48AM ( 1 hour ago )
UK nurses stage new walkout as strike wave intensifies
Thousands of nurses in Britain have walked out in a new strike over pay, with no end in sight to a wave of industrial action that has piled pressure on the U.K.’s overburdened public health system
9:03AM ( 2 hours ago )
AP Business
Ukraine helicopter crash kills interior minister, others
Authorities say a helicopter carrying Ukraine’s interior minister and other government officials has crashed into a kindergarten near the capital of Kyiv, killing him and about a dozen other people, including a child on the ground
10:58AM ( 8 minutes ago )
US, Chinese officials discuss climate, economy, relationship
U_S_ Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has met with her Chinese counterpart and pledged an effort to manage differences and “prevent competition from becoming anything ever near conflict.”
10:57AM ( 8 minutes ago )
Shooting by 6-year-old raises complex cultural questions
Even in a country where gun violence is commonplace, the story of a small boy with a gun is reverberating in a big way
10:55AM ( 11 minutes ago )
Fed's Powell tests positive for COVID, has 'mild' symptoms
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has tested positive for COVID-19 and is experiencing “mild symptoms,” the Federal Reserve announced
10:45AM ( 20 minutes ago )
At Davos, UN chief warns the world is in a 'sorry state'
The head of the United Nations says the world is in a “sorry state” because of myriad “interlinked” challenges including climate change and Russia’s war in Ukraine
10:44AM ( 22 minutes ago )