Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Weak Oct. retail sales spur unease

- By Joseph Pisani

Asurge in virus infections and the expiration of aweekly unemployme­nt boost has slowed spending.

NEW YORK — Retail sales in the U.S. grew a sluggish 0.3% in October, even as retailers offered early holiday discounts online and in stores.

A surge in coronaviru­s infections nationwide and the expiration of a $600 weekly boost to unemployme­nt checks over the summer has slowed spending by Americans and contribute­d to the slowest retail sales growth since this spring, when the pandemic shuttered stores, theaters, restaurant­s and workplaces.

Economists had expected sales to rise 0.5%, already a significan­t drop from September’s gain of 1.6%.

The data “point to a consumer sector that is becoming more cautious in its spending habits,” said Jim Baird, chief investment officer at Plante Moran, a financial advisory firm. “Weaker sales likely reflect several headwinds: the slowing recovery, the recent surge in COVID-19 cases across the country and the reduction in fiscal support for sidelined workers.”

Most of the gain occurred in just a few areas that reveal how the pandemic has altered spending trends in America. Sales rose at home and garden stores, electronic­s and appliance stores, and online retailers.

Those increases likely reflect ongoing home renovation­s and perhaps more computer purchases by those working from home and those families with children learning online.

Many Americans likely withdrew a bit out of fear of the virus: Spending at restaurant­s and bars fell 0.1% in October, the first drop in six months, even before many new restrictio­ns on indoor dining and curfews on bars were announced in recent days.

There is other evidence of growing consumer caution: Overall spending actually fell in early November, according to JP Morgan Chase, which anonymousl­y tracks activity on 30 million of its debit and credit cards.

The decline was somewhat worse in states with spikes in coronaviru­s cases, such as North Dakota and Iowa.

Nationwide, spending fell to 7.4% below a year ago,

JP Morgan said, a drop of about 2.5 percentage points from two weeks earlier.

The cutbacks could slow the economy in the final three months of the year, with some analysts forecastin­g growth of just 3% or 4% at an annual rate, down froma huge 33.1% snapback in the July-September quarter.

Best Buy, Target and Walmart offered holiday deals in mid-October to piggyback on Amazon, which held its Prime Day sales event in the fall after it was postponed this summer due to the pandemic.

Online shopping jumped 3.1% in October and has soared by nearly a third in the past year. It was hoped that retailers would be able to entice Americans to jump-start holiday shopping and avoid crowds.

Yet at clothing stores and sporting good shops, sales fell more than 4%. Department stores had a bigger drop, down nearly 5%.

The Commerce report covers only about a third of overall consumer spending. Services such as haircuts and hotel stays, which have been badly hurt by the pandemic, are not included.

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? Retail sales during October failed to meet levels that U.S. economists had expected.
STEVEN SENNE/AP Retail sales during October failed to meet levels that U.S. economists had expected.

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