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Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH -- Wednesday, 26 December 2012 [View all]xchrom
(108,903 posts)14. U.S. Holiday Sales Advanced a Marginal 0.7%, SpendingPulse Says
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-25/u-s-holiday-sales-advanced-a-marginal-0-7-spendingpulse-says.html
U.S. holiday sales growth slowed by more than half this year after gridlock in Washington soured consumers moods and Hurricane Sandy disrupted shopping, MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse said.
Retail sales grew by 0.7 percent from Oct. 28 through Dec. 24, the Purchase, New York, research firm said yesterday, without providing a dollar figure in the billions. Sales grew at a 2 percent pace in the same period a year ago. SpendingPulse tracks total U.S. sales at stores and online via all payment forms.
Americans became skittish as Washington approached the end of the year without an agreement to forestall higher taxes and automatic spending cuts -- the so-called fiscal cliff. Hurricane Sandy interrupted shopping in stores and online after it slammed into the East Coast in late October. Last month, retailers from Macys Inc. (M) to Target Corp. (TGT) posted same-store sales that trailed analysts estimates.
You are looking at modest to marginal growth from a year ago, Michael McNamara, a SpendingPulse vice president, said in a telephone interview yesterday. Weather events and the fiscal debate both anchored the season in terms of growth. The media coverage, which did a good job of explaining the negative consequences of the fiscal cliff, created this negative trend in consumer confidence and spending.
U.S. holiday sales growth slowed by more than half this year after gridlock in Washington soured consumers moods and Hurricane Sandy disrupted shopping, MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse said.
Retail sales grew by 0.7 percent from Oct. 28 through Dec. 24, the Purchase, New York, research firm said yesterday, without providing a dollar figure in the billions. Sales grew at a 2 percent pace in the same period a year ago. SpendingPulse tracks total U.S. sales at stores and online via all payment forms.
Americans became skittish as Washington approached the end of the year without an agreement to forestall higher taxes and automatic spending cuts -- the so-called fiscal cliff. Hurricane Sandy interrupted shopping in stores and online after it slammed into the East Coast in late October. Last month, retailers from Macys Inc. (M) to Target Corp. (TGT) posted same-store sales that trailed analysts estimates.
You are looking at modest to marginal growth from a year ago, Michael McNamara, a SpendingPulse vice president, said in a telephone interview yesterday. Weather events and the fiscal debate both anchored the season in terms of growth. The media coverage, which did a good job of explaining the negative consequences of the fiscal cliff, created this negative trend in consumer confidence and spending.
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