Conspicuous Correlation: Retail Sales August 2012
Today, the U.S. Census Bureau released its latest nominal read of retail sales showing an increase of 0.9% from July and an increase of 4.7% on a year-over-year basis on an aggregate of all items including food, fuel and healthcare services.
Nominal "discretionary" retail sales including home furnishings, home garden and building materials, consumer electronics and department store sales increased just 0.24% from July and a tepid 1.93% above the level seen in August 2011 while, adjusting for inflation, “real” discretionary retail sales increased a slight 0.24% over the same period.
The following chart shows the year-over-year change to nominal discretionary retail sales and the year-over-year change to nominal the S&P/Case-Shiller Composite home price index since 1993 and since 2000.
Looking at the chart below (click for full-screen dynamic version), adjusted for inflation (CPI for retail sales, CPI “less shelter” for S&P/Case-Shiller Composite) the “rough correlation” between the year-over-year change to the “discretionary” retail sales series and the year-over-year S&P/Case-Shiller Composite series seems now even more significant.
Labels: economy, housing prices, retail sales
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4 Comments:
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Jackie Champion, at 9:23 AM
It is hopeful to hear some increase in retail but it is still struggling due to the current economy. I am wondering if people will spend money for the holidays or become more crafty this year due to budgetary constraints.
By
Anna, at 10:29 PM
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