US Retail Sales Up A Solid 0.5% In May
Retail spending in the US rose 0.5% in May, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday -- a bit better than economists expected. The gain marks a sharp downshift from April’s 1.3% bounce. But April’s unusually strong advance isn’t sustainable, which means that it’s no great tragedy that today’s report was weaker by comparison. Overall, a look at the last two monthly increases suggests that there’s still a healthy glow for retail sales. A less-encouraging profile emerges, however, when we focus on the year-over-year trend, which is probably more reliable for analyzing the appetite for spending.
Consumption is still climbing at a decent if unspectacular pace in annual terms through May. But recent history suggests that gravity’s slight but persistent hand is at work. Headline retail spending rose 2.5% for the year through last month, down from 3.0% through April. Stripping out gasoline sales paints a firmer trend, but the deceleration in year-over-year spending growth is becoming conspicuous this year. Indeed, retail ex-gas consumption climbed 3.7% in May vs. the year-earlier level, which is at the low end of the annual range in recent years.
There’s certainly no smoking gun in today’s report. It’s reasonable to argue that the consumer is still inclined to spend at a rate that’s consistent with economic expansion. But we’re near the lower range of growth that passes the 'smell test' for concluding that a growth bias is still alive and well.
The question is whether the slow slide will endure? If it does, there could be trouble lurking in this year’s second half. Unfortunately, today’s numbers don’t make a strong case for arguing that the downside momentum has run its course.
Nonetheless, today’s results have inspired an optimistic spin in some quarters. “This is a very strong spring quarter for consumer spending,” Stuart Hoffman, chief economist at PNC Financial Services Group (NYSE:PNC) told Bloomberg, adding that the latest release boosts the view that the economy “is bouncing back pretty solidly”.
Maybe so, but the rosy narrative will come under pressure if the year-over-year trend suffers another dip in the next update. Retail spending’s annual rate has little room to fall further without triggering a warning sign for the economy. Maybe there’s a new-normal factor in play, which would mean that we’ll see slow growth that holds at a subdued pace for an extended period. It’s unclear if that will help the economy sidestep a new recession, but it’s certainly an intriguing possibility -- especially if that’s the only game in town for keeping optimism alive.
Then again, such debates may end up being merely academic if the next employment report delivers another weak set of numbers. The surprisingly tepid rise in payrolls in May may have been noise. But the crowd’s going to have a tough time holding on to that narrative if the July employment data remains soft for a second straight month.