'Unbelievable': Retail sales collapsed by the most since 2009 in December
- Retail sales fell by the most since 2009 in December.
- That points to a dropoff in consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of economic activity.
- The report was delayed by a five-week government shutdown that ended in January.
Retail sales plummeted by the most in nine years in December, an unexpected drop that has fueled concerns about an economy driven by consumer spending.
The Commerce Department said Thursday that retail sales sank 1.2% last month to $505.8 billion, marking the biggest drop since 2009, as receipts fell in nearly every major category. The results were well below economist expectations for a 0.1% increase.
"In one line: Unbelievable," said Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics. "These numbers are astonishing, and impossible to square with the Redbook chain-store sales survey, which reported surging sales in December and a record high in the week of Christmas, on the back of the plunge in gasoline prices."
Excluding volatile categories including gasoline, cars and food, core retail sales dropped 1.7% in December. In November, they had risen 1%.
The decline points to sharply weaker consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of economic activity, even during the typically strong holiday season.
The report had been delayed by the partial government shutdown that ended last month, which was the longest on record. The Commerce Department hasn't yet announced when retail sales data for January, which had previously been due Friday, will be released.
"These data are so wild that we have to expect hefty upward revisions, but if they stand, they are very unlikely to be representative of the trend over the next few months," Shepherdson said.
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