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Friday, February 03rd, 2012

How do retail sales stack up in an atypical recovery?

Posted on: Nov 24th, 2009 | By Rob Parenteau | Filed under Featured, Financial News

Rob Parenteau, currency and credit markets expert, and editor of The Richebacher letter, analyzes the current state of the economy, as represented by retail sales. Can retail really drive the recovery?

Rob Parenteau (The Daily Reckoning):
The U.S. consumer is bound to play only a lackluster role in this recovery. But this has not mattered to buyers of consumer discretionary stocks who are intent on using the typical business cycle recovery playbook in a recovery that is anything but typical.

The year-over-year growth rate of October retail sales ex-gas is nearly flat from a year ago, while the overall retail sales momentum is still just shy of closing that gap. With comparisons so easy against a year ago, when the global economy was in free fall, this is not a terribly inspiring result. Excluding autos, the sequential gain in October came up short of expectations, with only a 0.2% advance… Caution is still ruling, and for good reason.

Perhaps the dollar levels of retail sales tell the story more clearly. So far, we at best have a shallow recovery in overall retail sales, while furniture and electrical appliance stores are barely scraping out a trough.

Click here for the rest of Mr. Parenteau’s article at The Daily Reckoning.

More on this topic (What's this?)
Why We Need Currency Competition
Future Strength In Retail Sales?
A Risk Lurking in October’s Retail Sales (Koesterich)
Read more on Retail Sales, Currency, 2007 Credit Crunch at Wikinvest

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