Ottawa Citizen

Canadian retail rebounds in July but falls short of economists’ forecasts

- SHELLY HAGAN

Retail sales increased 0.4 per cent in July, the first advance in three months, as consumers spent more on new cars, Statistics Canada said Friday from Ottawa. The gain trailed economist expectatio­ns for a 0.6-per-cent increase. Excluding motor vehicles and gasoline, retail sales fell 0.1 per cent on the month.

The report falls short of economist expectatio­ns for a larger rebound and may suggest higher debt servicing costs are hindering consumer consumptio­n. Debt service costs reached a record in the second quarter, leaving consumers with less money in their wallets to spend on other goods.

In volume terms, which strip out the effects of price changes, July sales were flat on the month and the year, which echoed the second-quarter gross domestic product report that showed consumptio­n has been weak.

Year to date, volumes have increased 0.8 per cent, slightly less than the 0.84 per cent last year and the slowest pace of growth since 2009, the agency said.

Friday’s retail sales data may heighten concern about the degree to which debt service costs, which reached a record in the second quarter, are eating into disposable income, and call into question how much Canada can continue to rely on consumers to fuel new economic growth.

Cannabis store sales were up 14.3 per cent in July, driving an uptick in miscellane­ous store retailers. Ontario reported the largest increases in retail sales of any province, up 1.2 per cent in July; sales in five other provinces rose: Alberta, Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, Newfoundla­nd and Nova Scotia

Sales at motor vehicle and parts dealers advanced 1.5 per cent in July, the largest gain in five months, due primarily to new car consumptio­n.

E-commerce sales accounted for 3.2 per cent of total retail trade in July, up 32.8 per cent on the year.

June’s flat retail sales was revised slightly lower to a decline of 0.1 per cent.

Bloomberg

 ?? PETER J. THOMPSON/FILES ?? Concerns about debt service costs hindering retail may intensify after they reached a record in the second quarter.
PETER J. THOMPSON/FILES Concerns about debt service costs hindering retail may intensify after they reached a record in the second quarter.

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