
US Retail Sales and Pending Home Deals Surge, Defying Slowdown Forecasts
Consumer spending rose 0.9% in May and pending home sales jumped 3.8%, but fading tax refunds and high borrowing costs cloud the outlook.
American shoppers and homebuyers delivered a twin surprise in May, pushing retail sales and pending property transactions well beyond consensus forecasts. Commerce Department data released on Wednesday showed retail sales climbed 0.9 per cent month-on-month to $763.7 billion, nearly double the 0.5 per cent gain anticipated by economists. The rise, which followed a downwardly revised 0.4 per cent increase in April, was fuelled by warmer weather that drew consumers back to stores and by a welcome easing in petrol prices. Viewed from Washington, the figures suggest the US economy retains considerable momentum even as the Federal Reserve’s tightening cycle weighs on interest-rate-sensitive sectors.
Beneath the headline number, the composition of spending was mixed. Online sales advanced 1.5 per cent, home furnishing and furniture stores recorded a 1 per cent gain, and clothing and accessories outlets edged up 0.3 per cent. Electronics and appliance stores, however, saw a 0.5 per cent decline. Excluding the volatile autos component, retail sales rose 0.8 per cent, while stripping out both autos and petrol station receipts—where lower fuel prices depressed nominal takings—the core measure still posted a solid 0.7 per cent increase. Analysts in São Paulo noted that the year-on-year retail sales growth of 6.9 per cent partly reflects elevated inflation, as the data are not adjusted for price changes, meaning real consumption gains may be more modest than the nominal figures imply.
In a parallel release, the National Association of Realtors reported that its pending home sales index surged 3.8 per cent in May to 76.8, far outpacing the 1 per cent forecast and marking a 4.8 per cent year-on-year advance. The index, which tracks contract signings and serves as a leading indicator for existing-home sales, benefited from what the association’s chief economist described as “a late spring rush” that signals pent-up demand and a growing acceptance among consumers of mortgage rates above 6 per cent as the “new normal”. This resilience in the housing market, despite borrowing costs that remain historically high, underscores the depth of unmet need for homes and the willingness of buyers to adapt their expectations.
Yet the glow of May’s numbers is tempered by a clear warning: the fiscal cushion that helped power spending is deflating. Generous government tax refunds in April and May provided a temporary boost to household budgets, but economists in Washington and London caution that this effect is already fading. As that support wanes and the cumulative impact of the Federal Reserve’s rate hikes continues to filter through credit markets, a deceleration in both consumption and housing activity is widely expected. The retail data, unadjusted for inflation, may also overstate the true strength of demand if price pressures persist.
Looking ahead, the American consumer’s resilience will be tested. While the May figures offer a reassuring snapshot of an economy still capable of defying gloomier projections, the underlying drivers—tax refunds, seasonal tailwinds, and a temporary reprieve at the pump—are unlikely to be repeated. With savings dwindling and mortgage rates anchored above 6 per cent, the path forward points to a gradual cooling. For global investors and policymakers, the key question is whether this springtime vigour represents a last hurrah or the foundation for a more durable expansion.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
American households showed resilience in May, with retail sales rising 0.9% as warmer weather and lower gasoline prices helped. Economists caution, however, that the boost from generous tax refunds is fading, suggesting the momentum may not last.
Coverage shifts entirely away from the United States to South Africa, where retail sales rose 1.3% year-on-year in April. The brief dispatch simply reports the figures, offering no commentary on the American story.
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