Retail sales to be somewhat flat through 2020, says NAFCU

Retail sales showed a small recovery in August and rose 0.6 percent, following a revised 0.9 percent rise in July and an 8.6 percent increase in June. NAFCU’s Curt Long stated that, although retail sales growth continued to grow in August and is now up a “respectable” 2.5 percent from a year prior, concerns remain.

“For one, even though the goods market has rebounded, spending on services (which is not reflected in retail sales) has been more tepid,” said Long, NAFCU’s chief economist and vice president of research, in a NAFCU Macro Data Flash report. “Secondly, fiscal stimulus appears to be a key spending driver, particularly via enhanced unemployment benefits. JPMorgan Chase estimates that an astounding 73 percent of those payments were spent by recipients.

“With those benefits having mostly ceased and Congress still deliberating over a new spending package, the concern is that many households are dipping into savings or taking on debt in order to maintain spending levels,” said Long. “NAFCU expects retail sales growth to be relatively flat the rest of the year.”

Recovery has slowed in most sectors, with some exceptions. When compared to last month, the food service and drinking sector led the pack with a 4.7 percent rise, followed by clothing stores (+2.9 percent), furniture stores (+2.1 percent), and building material stores (+2 percent). Sporting goods stores saw a 5.7 percent drop.

 

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