The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Retail sales up record 17.7% in May

- By Josh Boak and Anne D’Innocenzio

BALTIMORE » U.S. retail sales jumped by a record 17.7% from April to May, with spending partially rebounding after the coronaviru­s had shut down businesses, flattened the economy and paralyzed consumers during the previous two months.

The government’s report Tuesday showed that retail sales have retraced some of the record-setting month-tomonth plunges of March (8.3%) and April (14.7%) as businesses have increasing­ly reopened. Still, the pandemic’s damage to retail sales remains severe, with purchases still down 6.1% from a year ago.

Last month’s bounce-back comes against the backdrop of an economy that may have begun what could be a slow and prolonged recovery. In May, employers added 2.5 million jobs, an unexpected increase that suggested that the job market has bottomed out. Still, a big unknown is whether early gains in job growth, retail sales and other areas can be sustained over the coming months or whether they may plateau at a low level.

“This may very well be the shortest, but still deepest, recession ever,” said Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. But she added that it’s “not likely that we’ll see a repeat in June as this is pent-up demand unleashed in one month.”

May’s rebound was likely aided by the $3 trillion in rescue money that the federal government has provided to companies and households. Retail sales would need to surge by an additional 9% to return to their level before the pandemic.

Any sustained recovery, though, will hinge on an array of factors: The path of the coronaviru­s, how willing consumers are to shop, travel and congregate in groups, how many businesses manage to stay open and rehire many workers and whether the government provides additional support.

“While the big increase in retail sales in May is encouragin­g, there is still a huge amount of uncertaint­y about the strength of the rebound,” said Gus Faucher, chief economist at PNC Financial Services. “It depends on a lot of factors outside of the economics.”

The virus-induced recession not only diminished spending in most sectors of the economy. It has also accelerate­d shifts in where people shop and what they buy. The changes forced by the coronaviru­s have aided online retailers and building materials stores and other outlets that stayed open during the outbreak. Other businesses are facing persistent financial strains.

Sales at non-store retailers, which include internet companies like Amazon and eBay, rose 9% in May after posting growth of 9.5% in April. They are up a sizable 30.8% from a year ago.

Building materials stores enjoyed a monthly gain of 10.9% last month and annualized growth of 16.4%. Grocers have posed a 14.4% annual sales increase, reflecting fewer people eating out at restaurant­s because of the pandemic.

Other sectors in retail posted spectacula­r growth in May yet still face an uncertain future given the blows they absorbed in March and April. Clothiers achieved a stunning 188% monthly gain but still remain down 63% over the past 12 months. Furniture store sales surged 90% last month, but they’re still down more than 21% on the year. This same pattern holds for restaurant­s, electronic­s stores, department

stores and auto dealers.

Retail sales account for roughly half of all consumer spending, which fuels about 70% of total economic activity. The rest of consumer spending includes services, from cellphone and internet contracts to gym membership­s and child care.

Nearly 80% of small retailers and restaurant­s tracked by the scheduling tool Homebase that were closed in mid-April have since reopened. Yet these smaller businesses remain under pressure. Their stresses in part reflect changes emerging as social distancing has become essential and shopping habits evolve.

One such retailer, CPW, a women’s clothing store, has been in business for 30 years on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. A threemonth shutdown resulting from the virus meant the store retained only 20% to 30% of its sales as the owner, Linda Wolff, packed and delivered orders to customer homes. Though CPW reopened for curbside pickup a week ago, Wolff said she hasn’t rung up a single such sale.

“This is my heart and soul,” she said. “I am exhausted from all the worrying.” Some national chains, by contrast, say they have so far avoided their worst fears. Macy’s CEO Jeff Gennette has said that his company’s reopened stores are regaining 50% of their typical business. Teen retailer American Eagle Outfitters is faring even better, averaging roughly 95% of its normal sales levels.

But analysts caution that some of the gains thus far probably reflect the impact of temporary government aid and expanded unemployme­nt benefits in the face of a deep recession. The jobless rate is a historical­ly high 13.3% by the government’s standard measure and an even worse 21.2% by the broadest gauge of unemployme­nt. For now, Americans are spending disproport­ionately more on essentials and less on luxuries.

The lockdowns sent many mall-based chains further into peril. These retailers furloughed workers, slashed costs to preserve dwindling cash reserves and, in the cases of Neiman Marcus, J.Crew and JC Penney, filed for bankruptcy protection.

These troubles have contrasted with renewed strength for Walmart, Target and Home Depot, which were deemed essential businesses from the start and were allowed to remain open.

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 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman sitting on a stoop reading a book in the sun is seen reflected by a closed clothing store’s window on West Broadway in the SoHo neighborho­od of the Manhattan borough in New York. U.S. retail sales likely recovered somewhat in May as the economy increasing­ly reopened from closures caused by the coronaviru­s and more shoppers felt confident enough to spend.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman sitting on a stoop reading a book in the sun is seen reflected by a closed clothing store’s window on West Broadway in the SoHo neighborho­od of the Manhattan borough in New York. U.S. retail sales likely recovered somewhat in May as the economy increasing­ly reopened from closures caused by the coronaviru­s and more shoppers felt confident enough to spend.

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