U.S. Retailers See Sales Soar in April
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Consumers buying cars, clothing and home improvement materials drove U.S. retail sales in April to the largest monthly gain since October, the government reported Tuesday, easing fears of a consumer slowdown and offering more evidence of a strengthening economy.
The 1.2% gain in retail sales over the previous month was double the growth rate economists had expected.
Adding to the upbeat news, several large retail chains reported better-than-expected quarterly earnings. They included the world’s largest retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., along with J.C. Penney Co., discounter TJX Cos. and jewelry sellers Tiffany & Co. and Zale Corp.
The surprising retail sales gains and profit reports sparked a stock market rally, with particularly strong stock price rises for Wal-Mart and Sears, Roebuck & Co.
“The consumer continued to ride the wave of strong wage growth and solid housing gains that have followed interest rate declines,” said Matt Fassler, a retail analyst with Goldman Sachs.
The Commerce Department said April sales of retail and food services gained 4% from the year-earlier month. Excluding auto-related spending, the gain was more impressive to economists, at 1.3% over March and 3.7% compared with a year ago.
The news contrasted with last week’s reports by individual retailers of April same-store sales, which had mostly disappointed investors and led some economists to question the health of consumer spending, which accounts for two-thirds of the domestic economy.
Based on those company reports, Goldman Sachs pegged April sales as gaining a scant 0.8% from the same period a year ago, well below the firm’s estimate of 2.8%.
But those tallies were skewed because of an early Easter holiday and because some of the retail industry’s strongest performers--including many home improvement and electronics stores--don’t report individual monthly sales.
The Commerce Department data released Tuesday pegged building material and garden retailers as gaining 5.6% over April 2001 and electronics and appliance sellers as gaining 8.5% over the same period a year earlier.
“There was some concern about a pullback, particularly when April chain store sales numbers came out on top of March data being relatively weak,” said Carl Steidtmann, chief economist with Deloitte & Touche. “But the consumer has been the stalwart of the economy all along.” That consumer strength has benefited discount sellers such as Wal-Mart. Its stock rose $2.35 on Tuesday, closing at $57.39 on the New York Stock Exchange. Shares in Sears gained $2.89 to $54.89 on the NYSE.
Wal-Mart reported first-quarter earnings of $1.65 billion, or 37 cents a share, up 20% from $1.38 billion, or 31 cents, a year earlier and beating by a penny the estimate of analysts polled by Thomson Financial/First Call. Wal-Mart sales jumped 14% to $55 billion.
Net income for J.C. Penney rose to $86 million, or 29 cents a diluted share, from $41 million, or 13 cents, a year earlier.
With first-quarter revenue at its JCPenney stores and Eckerd drugstores up 2.7% to $7.73 billion, the company also raised its full-year earnings guidance to 90 cents to $1 a share, compared with 39 cents last year. Shares in J.C. Penney rose $1.69 to $24.89 on the NYSE.
Off-price retailer TJX, which operates T.J. Maxx and Marshalls, said earnings for the quarter rose 19% from a year earlier to $147.1 million. Sales were $2.67 billion, up 17% from $2.27billion a year earlier. TJX shares rose 68 cents to $21.37 on the NYSE.
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