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Americans pumped the brakes on spending in May as they continued to face high interest rates and steeper prices for everyday goods.
Retail sales, a measure of how much consumers spent on a number of everyday goods including cars, food and gasoline, rose just 0.1% in May, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. That is notably lower than the 0.3% increase forecast by LSEG economists, although it is higher than the revised 0.2% drop recorded in April.
Excluding the more volatile measurements of gasoline and autos, sales also climbed just 0.1 % last month.
The May advance is not adjusted for inflation, meaning that consumers may be spending the same but getting less bang for their buck.
SILVER LINING OF HIGHER INTEREST RATES: SAVINGS ACCOUNT RATES
A shopper browses albums at a record store in Atlanta on Feb. 14, 2023. (Dustin Chambers/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)
«The ho-hum retail sales figures are probably in line with what the Federal Reserve expects and wants,» said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate. «The softness that we're seeing indicates that high interest rates are dampening demand, but not excessively so.»
Consumers spent money last month at car dealerships, electronics stores, health and personal care stores, clothing stores and when online shopping. The biggest increase took place at sporting goods, hobby, musical instrument and book stores, with spending rising by 2.8%.
However, they pulled back their spending at furniture and home stores, building material and garden stores, grocery stores,
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