The New York Times
I turned to Lawrence Haverty, retired distinguished retail analyst for States Street Research and Putnam Management who observed that we have had already two quarters of negative GDP and that prices are coming down. He feels that the inflation is over and unlikely to go higher in many classifications. He was surprised that the Federal Reserve Board raised rates by fifty basis point.
Jeremy Siegel observed that shipping costs are coming down rapidly, as are transportation costs in general. Supply line costs are decreasing, wages did not keep pace with the inflation when prices rose so that shoppers had less discretionary spending power. Food prices are reducing selectively and slowly.
Christmas sales started early this year. Notably was Amazon’s
November is the traditional start of the holiday shopping season, and while there were many sales before the Thanksgiving holiday, there were nearly 200 million Americans who shopped during the Thanksgiving weekend. That includes Cyber Monday which spiked spending. It will be interesting to see what this coming week will bring in sales.
This week the weather is finally colder, and boots and winter gear will move off the shelves. In addition, December 24th falls on the Saturday before Christmas. That day generates three to four percent extra sales which would boost the Christmas season to an 8% to 9% sales increase.
POSTSCRIPT: With the Federal Reserve raising the target for interest rates, one could see an abrupt decrease of sales in January and planned sales might not occur. We are in uncertain times. Major banking houses including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley
Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/walterloeb/2022/12/19/is-retail-in-recession–or-are-we-coming-out-of-it/