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United States News Title: Retailers' Sales Rise Most in 4 Years, Overcoming Job Concerns U.S. retailers sales are growing at the fastest pace in four years, a sign consumers may be overcoming concern about unemployment and depressed home values. Sales probably expanded at an average monthly rate of 4 percent in the first five months of the retail fiscal year that began Jan. 31, the biggest gain since 2006, the International Council of Shopping Centers trade group said in advance of its June report tomorrow. Nordstrom Inc. and Kohls Corp. are among chains that will report June sales increases at stores open at least a year, according to analysts estimates. Retailers may have bucked last months drop in consumer confidence that threatens to temper the rebound. The year-to- date growth in sales shows that spending, a key driver of the U.S. economy, is faring better than many investors are betting, said Michael Niemira, the New York-based ICSCs chief economist. The sales results have been uneven, which makes people worry about the recovery, Niemira said in a telephone interview. If you look at the underlying growth rate, it suggests a relatively healthy, moderate pace of spending for the remainder of the year. In the current fiscal year, the ICSCs monthly number swung as high as 9 percent in March, then receded to a 0.8 percent gain in April, partly because of an earlier Easter. June sales probably came in at the high end of a projected 3 percent to 4 percent range, the ICSC said today. Luxury, Wholesale The sales growth has been driven by a 4.2 percent increase at wholesale clubs, excluding gasoline sales, and an 8 percent jump at luxury chains this year, according to the ICSC. Wealthy consumers tend to come out of hibernation first after a recession, and the clubs are luring value-seeking customers, Niemira said. Our customers in the U.S. are feeling more confident than a year ago, tied to improved levels of net worth, Tiffany & Co. Chief Financial Officer James Fernandez told an investors conference June 30. Its probably also true, and not surprising, that economic issues and stock-market volatility still affect consumer psychology. The potential spoiler remains a lack of U.S. jobs. Employment fell in June for the first time this year, reflecting a drop in federal census workers and a smaller-than-forecast gain in the private sector, the Labor Department said July 2. Unemployment was one reason Deborah L. Weinswig, a retail analyst at Citigroup Inc., lowered her stock price forecasts and earnings estimates for Macys Inc. and other retailers. We are tempering our outlook for retail sales for the back half of 2010 based on mounting pressures against the consumer, the New York-based analyst wrote in a July 5 report. She also cited a lack of consumer credit, less home equity, and tax increases. Wary Investors The Standard & Poors 500 retail index rose 0.1 percent at 9:43 a.m. today. The 31-member index declined 6.7 percent this year before today after surging 47 percent in 2009. Investors seem to have given up on the consumers, Bill Dreher, an analyst with Deutsche Bank AG in New York, said on a July 1 conference call with clients. Most of our retail operators are very bullish. June sales reports will meet or beat analysts estimates, and the positive comparable-sales trend will continue, Dreher predicted. Retailers are well-positioned for profitability, with inventories and operating expenses tightly controlled, he said. Nordstrom will report a same-store sales increase of 11 percent for June and Kohls and Macys will post gains of 8 percent, Dreher estimated. Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of the U.S. economy. The Conference Boards confidence index slumped to 52.9 in June from a revised 62.7 in May, the New York-based private research group said June 29. Same-store sales are a key indicator of a retailers growth because they exclude results from new and closed locations. Year-Earlier Declines The chains numbers dont tell the whole picture because some retailers, including Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the worlds largest, and New York-based Tiffany, dont post figures monthly, and the reports dont include all spending online. The industrys latest gains look better partly because they are coming off steep declines a year earlier, and while the growth rates have improved, many retailers havent recovered their earlier sales volumes, Niemira said. Sales in 2010 will grow 3.5 percent to 4.5 percent at the more than 30 chains it tracks, the ICSC predicted in mid-May, faster than its January projection of 3 percent to 3.5 percent. An increase within the latest forecasted range would be the largest since 2006. Those sales dropped 1.6 percent last year. These growth rates are the best weve seen in several years, after a multiyear slump, Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners LLC, a consulting firm in New Canaan, Connecticut, said in a July 2 telephone interview. Some of the analysts get caught up in the month-to-month comparable sales, and they can be misleading.
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#3. To: go65 (#0)
This is what happens when you smoke crack and then write for Bloomberg.
yes badeye, if only everyone would run every bit of news by you first for fact checking, then we would actually believe that Exxon and Mobile [sic] are two companies and Shell is based in the U.S. And the unemployment rate doubled since Obama took office And all the other crap you post.
This economy is getting worse, not better. And your boy's policies are at the heart of it.
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