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Americans Are Spending Like Crazy at Restaurants

There was a record surge in Americans spending at restaurants, making it a risk if appetites for eating out return to normal.

Americans Are Spending Like Crazy at Restaurants
Servers sing happy birthday to a diner at a Cheesecake Factory Inc. restaurant in the Canoga Park neighborhood of Los Angeles, California, U.S. (Photographer: Patrick T. Fallon/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Spending at U.S. restaurants surged over the past three months by the most on record, making it both a bright spot for the economy and a risk if appetites for eating out return to normal.

Sales at food-service and drinking establishments rose 1.3 percent in July to $61.6 billion, the Commerce Department reported on Wednesday. That brought the three-month annualized gain to 25.3 percent, the fastest pace in figures going back to 1992.

Americans Are Spending Like Crazy at Restaurants

Such historic gains caught the attention of economists. Kevin Cummins and Michelle Girard at NatWest Markets said the figures indicate “consumers remain quite comfortable with their personal financial situation and the economic outlook.” Omair Sharif of Societe Generale noted that restaurants accounted for 30 percent of the July increase in retail sales but just 12 percent of the total.

“Any mean reversion here would lead to a noticeably slower pace of retail sales in the coming months,” Sharif wrote in a research note.

One possible explanation for the recent jump is that Americans are spending their extra cash from tax cuts on dining out. In addition, major restaurant companies have recently hiked menu prices to keep up with higher minimum wages and rent costs.

Sharif said the recent gains appear to reflect more people eating out more frequently, rather than just rising prices. The retail figures are adjusted for seasonal variation but not for inflation.

Cummins said consumer confidence is elevated and the fiscal stimulus may be having an effect on the data, citing a “very strong” pace of consumption gains in the second quarter.

Industry data show restaurant sales are growing while customer traffic declines, resulting in higher average checks, according to MillerPulse figures cited by Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Jennifer Bartashus.

While McDonald’s Corp. last month reported a gain in the key measure of same-store sales, its customer traffic still fell in its home market of the U.S. -- suggesting fewer diners are coming in but they are spending more.

Across the industry, restaurants are increasingly pushing delivery and discounts to attract diners. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc. this year is muscling its way into the delivery market with DoorDash and Postmates tieups. Meanwhile, fast-food chains are locked in a battle to offer the cheapest burger.

--With assistance from Leslie Patton and Chris Middleton.

To contact the reporters on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net;Reade Pickert in Washington at epickert@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Scott Lanman at slanman@bloomberg.net, Alister Bull

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