Los Angeles Times

U.S. retail sales slide 0.3% in May

The decline is the first since February and the biggest since January 2016.

- Times staff writer Samantha Masunaga contribute­d to this report.

Americans cut spending at gas stations, department stores and electronic­s shops in May as retail sales registered their biggest drop in 16 months, a cautionary sign for the economy.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that retail sales dropped 0.3%, the first decline since February and the sharpest since a 1% decrease in January 2016. Economists had expected sales to increase slightly in May after rising 0.4% in April.

Last month, furniture and home furnishing­s stores were up 0.4% from April. Clothing and clothing accessorie­s stores saw a bump of 0.3%.

Sales fell 2.8% at electronic­s stores, the biggest such drop since March 2016. They fell 2.4% at gasoline stations and 1% at department stores, which have struggled with competitio­n from online retailers, especially over millennial shoppers.

“I think big-box [stores] are going to continue to struggle until they reinvent themselves,” said Ron Friedman, a partner and cohead of retail and consumer products at accounting and advisory firm Marcum.

Shopping areas will increasing­ly need to bring in eateries to attract customers, who might then find it convenient to browse through the stores after a meal, he said.

“I think the idea of just getting in the car and going shopping may not happen as much,” Friedman said.

The retail industry’s cyclical nature makes month-over-month comparison­s less meaningful, said Paula Rosenblum, cofounder and managing partner at Retail Systems Research.

“It’s a seasonal business,” she said. “There really is not any basis to presume that month-over-month retail sales will continue up in a linear fashion.”

Instead, year-over-year comparison­s are a more accurate measuremen­t of the industry’s health, she said.

Over the last year, retail sales have risen a solid 3.8%, according to the Commerce Department.

Building material, garden equipment and supplies dealers saw a 10.8% rise compared with the same month last year. Nonstore retailers, which include online shopping and mail-order houses, were up 10.2%.

“By any reasonable measure, the industry is healthy,” Rosenblum said.

Economists have said they think that consumer spending, which accounts for about 70% of U.S. economic activity, will pick up in the spring and summer after a slow start to 2017. A slump in consumer spending early this year is a key reason the economy expanded at only a lackluster 1.2% annual pace in January through March.

The Trump administra­tion has said it can accelerate economic growth to 3% a year by cutting taxes, loosening regulation­s and pouring money into roads, bridges and other infrastruc­ture projects.

But President Trump’s agenda has been held up by political turmoil and a lack of details from the administra­tion. And economists are skeptical that Trump could overcome longer-term problems that weigh on economic growth, including an aging workforce and a slowdown in worker productivi­ty.

 ?? Wilfredo Lee Associated Press ?? WINDOW SHOPPERS browse in Miami Beach. Sales fell 1% in May at department stores, which have struggled with competitio­n from online retailers.
Wilfredo Lee Associated Press WINDOW SHOPPERS browse in Miami Beach. Sales fell 1% in May at department stores, which have struggled with competitio­n from online retailers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States