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Friday, June 18, 2010

With low retail sales, the rising consumer confidence calms volatile stocks

Retail sales dropped in May, and the stock market dropped in step with data delivered by the Commerce Department retail sales report. The new normal is now stock market volatility. The stock market rose at the end of the day Thursday before reversing direction early Friday when the May retail sales report was released. A schizophrenic market then seesawed throughout the day as conflicted investors weighed the negative retail sales report with an unexpectedly positive analysis of consumer confidence.

Article Source: Low retail sales, rising consumer confidence calm volatile stocks

Retail sales in the commerce department

Retail sales didn't help the optimism of a late stock market rally on Thursday evening. It was reported by the New York Times that Wall Street indexes fell Friday morning after the Commerce Department reported that retail sales decreased 1.2 percent last month, the largest drop since last fall. Five of 13 retail sales figure categories in the super depressing report decreased with the largest drop in building materials at 9.3 percent. Excluding sales to commercial fleets (overall auto sales increased in May), retail auto sales were down 1.7 percent.

The stock market and volatility week

All three major indexes closed higher for the week despite all the stock market volatility. Stock prices dove in the last hour Monday (jobless report), rebounded Tuesday (reassuring words from the Federal Reserve), dove again Wednesday (political pressure on BP dividends) and bounced back Thursday (overseas economic reports). The Times reports that Friday's session, its volatility tempered by the good cop/bad cop consumer confidence and retail sales reports, made the difference for the somewhat happy ending.

Forecast beat by consumer confidence rate

A few hours after the May retail sales report sent investors out of stocks and into bonds, the Reuters/University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for early June came in higher than expected at 75.5, which is actually up from 73.6 at the end of May and better than the 74.5 economists had been expecting. It was reported by Forbes that the disparity between the retail sales and consumer confidence reports signifies that many Americans still feel that their personal finances are under stress while they see the overall economy to be on the mend and hope for better days ahead.

Silver lining of retail sales

A deeper analysis of the retail sales report may explain why consumers on Main Street feel better than traders on Wall Street. Frank Ahrens of the Washington Post points out that even though retail sales dropped 1.2 percent from April to May, compared with May 2009 retail sales were actually up 7 percent. Ahrens goes further and decides to say that when excluding negative numbers from bigger pieces of the pie taken by auto sales, building materials and gasoline (down 3.3 percent) overall retail sales actually rose 0.1 percent in May.

Read more on this topic here

New York Times
nytimes.com/2010/06/12/business/12markets.html?src=mv
Forbes
forbes.com/2010/06/11/briefing-markets-economy-bp-retail-sales-consumer-sentiment-oil-spill-google-financials.html?boxes=Homepagechannels
Frank Ahrens
voices.washingtonpost.com/economy-watch/2010/06/retail_sales_drop_but_consumer.html



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