Retail Sales At Weakest Point In 5 Months
Economists Pessimistic About Future; White House Blames Overall Dip On Declining Auto Sales
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Energy Prices Drive Inflation
Energy prices led the worst monthly surge in inflation in 17 years. The spike drove food prices up, along with transportation costs and apparel. Anthony Mason reports.
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Shoppers walk past a back to school advertisement at a mall in San Jose, Calif. on Aug. 12, 2008. The government says retail sales fell in July, the weakest performance in five months. (AP PHOTO)
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The Commerce Department reported Wednesday that retail sales dipped 0.1 percent last month when a variety of economic woes combined to blunt the impact of billions of dollars in government stimulus payments to U.S. households.
It was the first decline since sales had fallen by 0.5 percent in February and it was a worse showing than the flat reading economists had been expecting. The new report did revise higher the estimate for June, showing sales rose by 0.3 percent that month rather than the 0.1 percent initial reading.
The weakness in July came after another big slide in auto sales as Detroit faced its worst sales month in 16 years. Automakers have been battered by the weak economy and record gasoline prices which have cut into demand for their once-popular sport utility vehicles and pickup trucks.
The White House noted that overall sales had been heavily influenced by the big drop in auto sales and what presidential spokesman Tony Fratto called "substantial headwinds faced by households." Fratto said that the weakness in July was occurring at a time when gasoline pump prices were peaking at more than $4 per gallon.
Excluding the big drop in autos, retail sales would have posted a 0.4 percent increase. While that was a positive reading, it was still the weakest showing for sales excluding autos in five months.
Much of what little strength there was in July came from a big jump in sales at gasoline stations, which were up 0.8 percent. That increase reflected surging prices rather than increased demand, however.
Analysts said the poor showing in July, the last month for bulk mailings of stimulus checks, raised concerns about consumer spending going forward.
"Cautious and uncertain consumers are watching their wallets and with the back-to-school shopping season under way, that does not bode well for retailers," said Joel Naroff, chief economist for Naroff Economic Advisors.
For example, Macy's Inc. said Wednesday that its second-quarter earnings dropped slightly and it warned that full-year profits will be below Wall Street expectations.
On Wall Street, stocks fell for a second session after the retail sales report and oil prices rose.
In other economic news, the Labor Department reported that surging oil prices helped to push up import prices by 1.7 percent in July and left import prices up by 21.6 percent compared to a year ago, the biggest year-over-year reading on record.
In a third report, the Commerce Department said that business inventories rose by 0.7 percent in June, nearly double the 0.4 percent gain in May and the biggest increase since last January.
Analysts believe that businesses will continue boosting inventories in the months ahead. The ratio of inventories to sales fell to an all-time low of 1.23 months in June, meaning it would take that long to exhaust stockpiles at the June sales rate. Sales at all levels of business rose by 1.7 percent in June, up from a 1.1 percent gain in May.
Gasoline pump prices hit an all-time high in July at $4.11 per gallon. Without the big rise in gasoline station sales, retail sales would have fallen by 0.2 percent in July.
The disappointing performance of retail sales meant that the consumer sector, which accounts for two-thirds of total economic activity, got off to a weak start at the beginning of the third quarter. The government wrapped up distributing the bulk of the economic stimulus payments for a total of $92 billion through the end of July.
The Bush administration and Congress rushed a $168 billion package of stimulus payments to households and tax breaks for businesses through Congress at the beginning of this year. They were hoping to keep the worst slump in housing in decades and a severe credit crunch from pushing the country into a deep recession.
The stimulus payments, which the government started distributing in late April, have had only a limited impact on consumer spending. Their benefits have been blunted by a surge in gasoline prices that was occurring at the same time.
Studies have shown that so far about only 20 percent of the stimulus checks have been spent with consumers choosing to save much of the rest of the payments. The administration argues that the checks will get spent in coming months, helping to lift economic activity for the rest of the year.
Private economists are not as optimistic. Some believe that the effects from the stimulus will fade after the current quarter and activity in the final three months of this year and the first three months of next year will slump dramatically. Some economists believe that the gross domestic product will contract in both quarters, fulfilling the classic definition of a recession.
Democrats in Congress have begun to push for a second stimulus package. So far, the Bush administration has opposed it in part over concerns about what further stimulus activity will do to the budget deficit. The administration is already projecting the budget gap will hit a record of $482 billion next year.
For July, the retail sales report showed that sales at department stores and other general merchandise stores rose by 0.3 percent, just half the 0.6 percent June increase. Sales at restaurants and bars, which have been hit hard by the current slowdown, dipped by 0.2 percent in July after a modest 0.3 percent June gain.
Sales at furniture stores, which have been hurt by the steep slump in housing, rose by 1 percent in July but that followed a 1.2 percent decline in June.
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.





''When everyone gets their stimulus checks, everything will be just fine.''
- George W. Bush
Did anyone actually expect, with gas at $4 a gallon, that people would have extra cash around to pay anyone but the Oil Man? Why the surprise then, when Retail Man has to pay a bit of the price?
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Great! - Made in China
It''s the American way. Look at the bright side the $600 surge worked for almost a month. And to think winter coming early this year. Back to school they can wear last years sneekers and clothes. And ditch the cell phone JR thinks he needs. Better learn to say no now. Spoiled brats
''but the surge is working'' ... said hiam fulofshat, the white house spokesman.
White House Blames
White House Blames
White House Blames
White House Blames
White House Blames
White House Blames
White House Blames
EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING
White House Admits
ZERO
O
NADA
ZILCH
That''s it''s really their own Policies
White House Blames Overall Dip On Declining Auto Sales
Retail Sales At Weakest Point In 5 Months
U.S. Drivers Hitting The Road Less
Spurred By High Gas Prices, 12.2 Billion Fewer Miles Driven In June Than Year Before
Consumers say it''s blow back a result of Bush Admin Policies over the last seven years!
FYI-BUSH SR. FORMER CIA LEADER PUTIN FORMER KGB
Bush meeting Putin June 2001
Bush-
This was a very good meeting. And I look forward to my next meeting with President Putin in July. I very much enjoyed our time together.
He''s an honest, straightforward man who loves his country. He loves his family.
We share a lot of values.
I view him as a remarkable leader.
I believe his leadership will serve Russia well.
#2 oil is cheaper to produce than gas and doesn''t have tax on it
why do the oil companies sell it for more than gasoline?
Because rising food and energy prices along with a weakened dollar have absolutely nothing to do with it.
But i want to contribute to revert this situation, so here it is, some activities you people should stick to:
1.information technology. msft, cisco, ibm, sun, google and others are unbeatable. Your kids should study that.
2.entertainment. so far u are doing a great job on this subject. Reading your posts here is hilarious and personally I think you are natural born entertainers. Stick to movies, hollywood, vegas and disneyworld.
3.porn. Yup, you dont want your daughters filming porn, but there are zillions of good american made porn videos around. I hope that remains the same ;)
4.drugs. You should keep doing them, you are good at them too.
Forget about manufacturing, finance, insurance, beer, oil, cars, airplanes, spaceships, food, medicines, etc. Leave that to germany, china, france, india, brazil, mexico or even lesotho. Everybody could do better than u did.
Greetings and see you in hell.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by funnyclown7
Mom?
The stimulus checks didn''t work, so what are the politicians considering doing AGAIN?! YUP!
You guessed it! Issuing another round of checks!
November can''t come soon enough!
Because "Republican Suicide Bombers" have been sent by the British namely by Tony Blair to blow out economy by another unneccessary war.
Now that that mission has been accomplished, it''s time to shut down our fake and phony consumer-led service-sector debt-based economy.
As far as everyday stuff...we are not worried about our jobs and have been through "crises" like this before.
It will pass and people will be better off again.
Fortunately, I live about three miles from work so gas has not been a real issue.
Posted by jeff92706
Glad your squeezing by, Jeff! Can''t wait to read the rest of your Christmas letter.
For some, right to secret ballot could be lost
http://www.ajc.com/opinion/content/shared-blogs/ajc/thinkingright/entries/2008/08/13/right_to_vote_in_privacy_could.html
NEVER VOTE DEMONIC-RAT AGAIN,,,
THEY ARE FOR COMMUNISM,,,
Howard Stern vows never to vote for Democrat again due to merger opposition: ''They''re for Communism''...
http://www.businessandmedia.org/articles/2008/20080724152511.aspx
some people are slow learners,,,
must be the DEMONIC-RAT controlled public education/propoganda system,,,
NO nancy,,,
recession
Definition
Period of general economic decline, defined usually as a contraction in the GDP for six months (two consecutive quarters) or longer. Marked by high unemployment, stagnant wages, and fall in retail sales, a recession generally does not last longer than one year and is much milder than a depression. Although recessions are considered a normal part of a capitalist economy, there is no unanimity of economists on its causes.
http://www.businessdictionary.com/definition/recession.html
The administration needs to wake up,I would imagine a good portion of those that got the $600.00 have nothing left of it to spend. When winter hits it is really going kill the retailers....
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by akpals
August 17, 2008 10:14 AM EDT
- I can''t really understand why these reporters write this stuff like they think we will be surprised by any of it. Americans spent their money a long time ago at the gas pump, the grocery store, and got caught up on some bills so we can avoid a major crisis later when the heating bills skyrocket. Of course those who get food stamps, heating assistance, HUD housing, and free medical care probably had a hayday down at Walmart. Did they honestly think people are dumb enough to spend their stimulus check on "big ticket items"?
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