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U.S. Retail Sales Slide Most in 10 Months on Inflation, Omicron

U.S. retail sales slumped in December by the most in 10 months.

U.S. Retail Sales Slide Most in 10 Months on Inflation, Omicron
Shoppers carry bags inside the Westfield San Francisco Centre shopping mall in U.S. (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg)

U.S. retail sales slumped in December by the most in 10 months, suggesting the fastest inflation in decades is taking a greater toll on consumers just as the nation confronts more coronavirus infections.

The value of overall purchases decreased 1.9%, after a revised 0.2% gain a month earlier, Commerce Department figures showed Friday. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation, suggesting price-adjusted receipts were even weaker than the headline number.

The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey called for a 0.1% drop in overall retail sales from the prior month.

U.S. Retail Sales Slide Most in 10 Months on Inflation, Omicron

The year-end slide in retail purchases sets up for a tepid handoff to the first quarter. Combined with the impact from the omicron variant, which is denting outlays for services such as travel and dining out, the figures help explain why economists project household spending to soften.

Furthermore, falling price-adjusted wages, dwindling savings and the end of the government’s pandemic-related financial programs suggest a more moderate pace of spending.

December, at the tail end of the holiday-shopping season, is traditionally a solid month for retail sales. However, concerns about shipping delays prompted many consumers to shop earlier than usual to ensure gifts arrived on time. Because the figures are adjusted for seasonal variations, the earlier shopping may have contributed to the weaker-than-expected figures.

U.S. Retail Sales Slide Most in 10 Months on Inflation, Omicron

Broad Decline

Ten of the 13 retail categories showed declines in receipts last month, led by non-store retailers, which includes e-commerce. Those sales plummeted 8.7% from a month earlier.

Department-store receipts decreased 7% after a 5.5% drop in November. Sales at furniture stores, electronics outlets and sporting goods establishments also fell.

Receipts at restaurants and bars, the report’s only services-oriented category and a sign of omicron’s early impact, dropped 0.8% after rising the prior month. 

Motor vehicle sales declined 0.4%. Automakers last year struggled to meet demand as production efforts were hampered by shortages of semiconductors are parts. The result was fewer vehicles on dealer lots and limited choices for buyers.

The government’s report showed retail sales excluding gasoline and motor vehicles slumped 2.5% in December. 

So-called control group sales -- which are used to calculate gross domestic product and exclude food services, auto dealers, building materials stores and gasoline stations -- fell 3.1% in December from a month earlier, the most since February.

The drop in overall sales last month capped an otherwise solid year for retailers. Over 2021, total retail sales climbed more than 19% compared with the prior year.

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.