March 17, 2025

Retail sales rose 0.2% in February after having fallen 1.2% in January and having risen 0.7% in December.   In the past year retail sales have risen 3.2%  The wildfires in California that raged from January 7 through the end of January, and the bitter cold weather throughout the rest  of the country. took a big toll on sales in January but they rebounded only modestly in February.  It could be that the downturn in sentiment in January and February related to tariffs and their possible impact on inflation is causing consumers to restrain their pace of spending.

Motor vehicle sales fell 0.4% in February after having declined 3.7% in January and having climbed by 1.3% in December.  In the past year car sales have risen 3.3%.

Retail sales ex autos and gas, which eliminates the two most volatile components and is a better gauge of the trend pace of sales rose 0.5% in January after declining 0.8% in January and rising 0.4% in December..   In the past year this so-called core spending pace has risen 3.6%.

Restaurant sales declined 1.5% in February after  having been unchanged in February after falling 0.7% in January.   In the past year restaurant sales have risen 1.8%.   Consumers continue to dine out, but their spending on restaurant meals has clearly slowed in the past couple of months.

Sales at nonstore retailers jumped 2.4% in February after having fallen 2.4% in January after having risen 0.5% in December.   In the past year nonstore sales have risen 6.7%.

The combination of a 0.2% increase in sales with a 0.2% increase in the CPI caused real retail sales to be unchanged in February after  having plunged by 1.7% in January and risen 0.4% in December.  Real sales have risen 0.3% in the past year.  The drop in real retail sales in January appears to have been caused by the California fires and the bitter cold weather elsewhere, but its failure to rebound in February is a sign that the consumer is beginning to slow his or her pace of spending in the face of considerably uncertainty regarding tariffs and their impact on inflation in the months ahead.

Stephen Slifer

NumberNomics

Charleston, SC