Retail Report to Show Demand as Consumers Faced Banking Troubles, Rising Rates

[ad_1] Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal estimated that retail sales fell 0.5% in March after adjusting for typical seasonal patterns but not inflation. [ad_2] Source link

China Consumer Price Growth Eases, Reflecting Caution on the Economy

[ad_1] Economy Asia Economy While the scrapping of Covid controls has opened up the economy, joblessness and an uncertain outlook have kept a lid on domestic spending [ad_2] Source link

Consumer Spending Growth Moderated in February and Core Inflation Eased

[ad_1] Consumer spending increased a seasonally adjusted 0.2% in February, from January’s revised 2% increase, which was the largest one-month gain in nearly two years. [ad_2] Source link

February Retail Sales to Show if Consumers Pulled Back

[ad_1] Credit- and debit-card data showed spending lost momentum. [ad_2] Source link

Jobs Report to Show U.S. Economy’s Momentum in February

[ad_1] Economy U.S. Economy Recent figures point to acceleration with strong jobs growth, firming inflation and higher consumer spending [ad_2] Source link

Brisk Sales Are Powering Restaurant Stocks

[ad_1] U.S. consumers are still flocking to restaurants and bars. Lately, shareholders have been cashing in. The restaurant industry usually fares well when labor and food costs rise gradually, and…

Inflation Firmed, Consumer Spending Jumped in January

[ad_1] Consumers stepped up spending in January, likely leaving the Federal Reserve on track to keep raising interest rates. [ad_2] Source link

Economy Week Ahead: U.S. Household Spending, Home Sales in Focus

[ad_1] Economy Economy Week Ahead The Federal Reserve also slated to release minutes about interest rates [ad_2] Source link

The U.S. Consumer Bounces Back

[ad_1] The strong labor market, fading pandemic concerns and jump in Social Security benefits helped boost spending last month, and there could be more to come. [ad_2] Source link

Chinese Consumers Hoard Cash After Confidence Takes a Hit

[ad_1] Markets Economists believe spending will be slow to bounce back after the end of zero-Covid [ad_2] Source link