I’m having a tough time seeing how many/most/all of the various pandemic (and latest Fed bailout) programs actually translated into *new* *incremental* *cash* that could actually *fuel* the spending spikes. Would you like to be notified via email when WOLF STREET publishes a new article? Sign up here. Click on the beer and iced-tea mug to find out how: CPI consumer electronics: -12.0% year over year.Įnjoy reading WOLF STREET and want to support it? You can donate.Sales: $7.2 billion, seasonally adjusted.Not included are the electronics and appliance sales at ecommerce operations and at other brick-and-mortar retailers, such as General Merchandise stores. Sporting goods, hobby, book and music stores (1.3% of total retail) Įlectronics and appliance stores: Sales at specialty electronics and appliance stores (Best Buy, Apple stores, etc.). From February 2001: -40% despite 21 years of inflation.CPI Household furnishings: 6.3% year-over-year.ĭepartment stores (now down to 1.7% of total retail, as consumers increasingly bought this stuff online, including at the ecommerce sites of the few surviving department store chains):.Sales: $12 billion, seasonally adjusted.Spot Index, average prices have plunged 21% year-over-year:įurniture and home furnishing stores (1.7% of total retail): ![]() Sales: $16 billion, seasonally adjusted.Cannabis stores are the growth driver in this category. Miscellaneous store retailers, includes cannabis stores (2.3% of total retail): Specialty stores, from art-supply stores to wine-making supply stores. This chart shows the relationship between the CPI for gasoline as index value representing price levels not percentage changes (green) and sales in billions of dollars at gas stations, including all the other merchandise gas stations sell (red, left axis):īuilding materials, garden supply and equipment stores (6.1% of total retail):Ĭlothing and accessory stores (3.8% of total retail): CPI for gasoline: -2.0% year over year:. ![]() General merchandise stores, without department stores (8.9% of total retail): ![]() CPI for “food at home”: +0.3% month-to-month, +10.2% year over year:.CPI for “food away from home”: +8.4% year over year:įood and Beverage Stores (11.6% of total retail):.Month over month: -2.2% after the huge +7.2% spike in January.CPI new vehicles: +0.2% for the month, +5.8% year-over-year.Įcommerce and other “nonstore retailers” (16% of total retail sales), ecommerce retailers, ecommerce operations of brick-and-mortar retailers, and stalls and markets:įood services and drinking places (13% of total retail), includes restaurants, cafeterias, bars, etc. ![]()
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