The solid report from the Commerce Department on Tuesday suggested high inflation was not yet dampening spending, even as worries about the rising cost of living sent consumer sentiment tumbling to a 10-year low in early November. Rising household wealth, thanks to a strong stock market and house prices, as well as massive savings and wage gains appear to be cushioning consumers against the highest annual inflation in three decades.
Retail sales jumped 1.7 percent last month, the largest gain since March, after rising 0.8 percent in September. It was the third straight monthly advance and topped economists' expectations for a 1.4 percent increase. Sales soared 16.3 percent year-on-year in October and are 21.4 percent above their pre-pandemic level.
"Today's numbers show that consumers are getting a jump on their holiday shopping," said Matthew Shay, president of the National Retail Federation in Washington. "We continue to urge consumers to shop early and shop safely, and we fully expect this holiday season to be one for the record books."
October's broad increase in sales partly reflected higher prices as monthly consumer inflation surged 0.9 percent in October, which boosted the annual rate to 6.2 percent.
Sales were led by motor vehicles, with receipts at auto dealerships advancing 1.8 percent after gaining 1.2 percent in September. The rise reflected the first increase in unit sales in six months, as well as higher prices. The tight supply of automobiles because of a global semiconductor shortage is driving up prices.
But sales at clothing stores fell 0.7 percent. Sales at restaurants and bars were unchanged despite an ebb in Covid-19 infections, driven by the Delta variant. Restaurants and bars are the only services category in the retail sales report. These sales were up 29.3 percent from last October.
"If services spending has largely recovered, strong goods demand increasingly looks to be a structural shift in consumer preferences, rather than a temporary Covid-related outcome," said Andrew Hollenhorst, chief U.S. economist at Citigroup in New York.
Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity rose at a tepid 1.7 percent rate last quarter. Economists at JPMorgan boosted their fourth-quarter GDP growth estimate to a 5 percent rate from a 4 percent pace. Goldman Sachs raised its estimate by 0.5 percentage point to a 5.0 percent rate. The economy grew at a 2 percent rate in the third quarter.
The economic picture was further brightened by a separate report from the Federal Reserve on Tuesday showing manufacturing output surged 1.2 percent last month to its highest level since March 2019, after falling 0.7 percent in September.
Businesses are also making steady progress replenishing depleted inventories, which should help to keep factories humming and support the economy. Business inventories increased 0.7 percent in September, a third report from the Commerce Department showed.