Economic Recovery, Retail | featured news

Retail sales fall for third straight month in June

Retail sales fell for a third straight month in June as demand slumped for everything from cars and electronics to building materials, a sign the economic recovery is flagging.

 

U.S. Retail Sales Climb

U.S. retail sales climbed at the fastest rate in four months during February, increasing by 1.0% from the previous month to $387.12 billion.

 

Fed survey: US economy ends 2010 on strong note

The U.S. economy ended last year on an encouraging note, with all parts of the country showing improvements. Factories produced more, shoppers spent more and companies hired more. All those sign...

 

Retail Sales in US Climbed More Than Forecast in September

Retail Sales in US Climbed More Than Forecast in September

Retail sales in the U.S. climbed more than forecast in September, easing concern that unemployment stuck near a 26-year high will bring the recovery to a halt.

 

Retail experts see rosier holiday season

Retailers should see their best Christmas sales in four years as consumers now show some inclination to spend money despite a minimal recovery in the economy, according to series of recent forecasts.

 

Retail sales drop 0.5% in June

Retail sales fell in June for the second straight month, more evidence that the U.S. economic recovery will slow in the second half of the year.

 

April A Winner For U.S. Retailers

April A Winner For U.S. Retailers

Retail sales and industrial production in April both enjoyed continued growth, reinforcing the sustainability of the economic recovery in the United States. On Friday the U.S. Commerce Department reported retail sales gained 0.4% in April, ahead of Wall Street’s expected 0.2% rise, but below the 2.1% jump in March. Peter Newland, economist at Barclays Capital, notes that the total was driven by a 0.5% increase in both autos and gasoline, and a 6.9% jump in building material sales. All of that is nice, but core sales, which exclude these elements, actually fell 0.2%, which is much weaker than excepted.

 

U.S. Retail Sales Topped Forecasts, Rose 0.3% in February

U.S. Retail Sales Topped Forecasts, Rose 0.3% in February

The 0.3 percent increase, the biggest since November, provided hope that the recovery was gaining momentum.

 

Third-Quarter Growth Weaker Than First Thought

Third-Quarter Growth Weaker Than First Thought

The downward revision, to 2.2 percent growth from 2.8 percent, was partly because shoppers did not spend as much and construction was weaker than first thought.

 

U.S. Retail Sales Exceed Forecasts

U.S. Retail Sales Exceed Forecasts

Consumers spent more on gasoline and a wide range of other goods, data showed, raising hopes of a self-sustaining economic recovery.

 

Subscribe to this RSS topic: Syndicate content