U.S. retail sales for December remained flat at 0.0% MoM, significantly below the forecast of +0.4% and the previous month's +0.6%. Year-over-year, the figure is +2.4% YoY — the lowest increase since 09/2024, despite December being the holiday shopping season in the U.S. Most importantly, the (control group) contributing to GDP turned negative, decreasing by -0.1% MoM — a reversal from +0.2% last month and well below the +0.4% forecast. December retail sales data indicate that U.S. consumer spending momentum continues to weaken, especially in core groups directly related to GDP. The market has priced in increased expectations of short-term monetary policy easing.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
U.S. Retail Sales for December Disappoint
U.S. retail sales for December remained flat at 0.0% MoM, significantly below the forecast of +0.4% and the previous month's +0.6%. Year-over-year, the figure is +2.4% YoY — the lowest increase since 09/2024, despite December being the holiday shopping season in the U.S.
Most importantly, the (control group) contributing to GDP turned negative, decreasing by -0.1% MoM — a reversal from +0.2% last month and well below the +0.4% forecast.
December retail sales data indicate that U.S. consumer spending momentum continues to weaken, especially in core groups directly related to GDP. The market has priced in increased expectations of short-term monetary policy easing.