U.S. retail sales in June were largely unchanged from May, but a key reading that feeds into growth forecasts powered higher, challenging bets that the Federal Reserve would reduce interest rates in the autumn.
Headline retail-sales growth in June was unchanged from May to a collective total of $704.3 billion, the Commerce Department said Tuesday, a tally that was firmly stronger than economists’ consensus forecast of a 0.3% decline.
The May total was revised higher as well, to an advance of 0.3% from the original estimate of a 0.1% gain.
The closely tracked control-group number rose 0.9% on the month, again firmly topping Wall Street forecasts of a 0.2% advance. This figure, which excludes autos, building materials, office supplies, gas-station sales and tobacco, feeds into the government’s GDP calculations.
The Atlanta Fed will update its GDPNow forecasting tool later in the session. Its last reading, published July 10, suggests a current-quarter growth rate of 2%.
Gasoline-station sales were down 5.1%, the report indicated, after Energy Department data showed the national average slipped 4% from May to $3.576 per gallon.
Powell sees progress on inflation
U.S. equity futures extended gains following the data release, with contracts tied to the S&P 500 suggesting a gain of around 7 points while the Dow was called 120 points to the upside. The Nasdaq, meanwhile, is priced for a 50-point bump.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury note yields rose 5 basis points (0.05 percentage point) to 4.212% following the data release, while 2-year notes were up 4 basis points to 4.453%.
Related: CPI inflation report fuels Fed interest rate cut bets
CME Group’s FedWatch indicates the Fed will hold its benchmark rate steady at between 5.25% and 5.5% at its next policy meeting later this month in Washington, with the odds of a September rate cut now pegged at around 87%.
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell told an event at the Economic Club of Washington D.C. earlier this week that he and his colleagues were seeing data that gave them some confidence that inflation was returning to the central bank’s preferred 2% target.
He also added that cooling conditions in the labor market were bringing both of the Fed’s mandates, which include price stability and full employment, into “much better balance.”
Powell also insisted that “a kind of hard-landing scenario” is “certainly not the most likely scenario” for the world’s biggest economy.
A soft economic landing means easing inflation with no recession.
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Commerce Department data last week showed that headline consumer-price inflation for June slowed to an annual rate of 3%, the lowest in a year, while core price pressures showed the mildest monthly increase since January 2021.
The Labor Department’s June jobs report was also dovish, showing the slowest advance in average hourly earnings in three years amid the first rise in headline unemployment above 4% since 2022.
The economy added 1.334 million new jobs over the first half, down around 23% from the 1.736 million total created over the year-earlier period. Revisions to prior estimates removed around 111,000 in gains over the past thee months.
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