Broad-based gains were driven by rebounding auto sales and robust holiday shopping. A key retail sales measure for GDP calculations also rose in November.
U.S. consumers opened their wallets at the start of the holiday shopping season as retail sales posted their best month since July.
November retail sales rose 0.6 percent, from a downwardly adjusted 0.1 percent decline in the previous month, according to the Department of Commerce’s Census Bureau on Jan. 14.
This came in higher than the market forecast of 0.4 percent.
Retail sales also climbed by 3 percent year-over-year, higher than economists’ expectations of 2.7 percent.
Broad-based gains were driven by rebounding auto sales and robust holiday shopping, contributing to the better-than-expected reading.
Motor vehicle and parts sellers, home‑improvement and garden retailers, gas stations, sporting‑goods shops, and other miscellaneous stores all posted increases of more than 1 percent.
“November was a solid, but not spectacular, month for retailers,” Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate, said in a statement to The Epoch Times.
“We now have data for two-thirds of the holiday shopping season (since many people started in October), and year-over-year sales are outpacing inflation by about three-quarters of a percentage point. That’s pretty good, all things considered.”
Meanwhile, the retail sales control group—a key measure that excludes auto dealers, building materials stores, food services, and gas stations—advanced 0.4 percent, in line with forecasts, following a 0.6 percent gain in October.
This metric is used to calculate gross domestic product (GDP) because it largely tracks real personal consumption expenditures—the biggest component of U.S. GDP.
Despite the 43-day government shutdown, fourth-quarter growth prospects remain high.
The widely monitored Atlanta Federal Reserve GDPNow Model estimates that the economy may have expanded 5.1 percent, driven by strong consumer spending, net exports, and changes in private inventories.
Some economic observers are drawing comparisons to the 1990s, arguing that the United States is witnessing productivity-driven growth.
“I have drawn the analogy to the 90s for years, and it looks like we are seeing the same kind of productivity-driven growth. Though I believe this one is deeper and likely more sustainable,” Nancy Tengler, CEO and CIO of Laffer Tengler Investments, said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times.
In the third quarter, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis, nonfarm productivity increased by 4.9 percent, from an upwardly revised 4.1 percent increase in the previous quarter—the fastest pace in two years. This topped the consensus forecast of 3 percent.
Unit labor costs declined 1.9 percent but were up from the second quarter drop of 2.9 percent.
“If we continue to see a middling labor market with supply side incentives (OBBBA), we will likely see disinflationary growth,” Tengler said. “This will be also driven by the lapping of tariffs or the removal of some.”
By Andrew Moran







