January retail sales missed expectations, impacting key sectors. Click here to find out why FDIS ETF is a Hold.
U.S. retail sales surged 4.8% year-over-year in January, rising to $668 billion, setting the stage for unexpectedly strong ...
A gauge of the dollar fell to a fresh year low, as weak retail sales data and uncertainty over US tariff policy widened ...
New data out Friday showed retail sales declined more than expected in the first month of 2025. Headline retail sales fell ...
Advance estimates of U.S. retail and food services sales for January dropped 0.9 percent, a government report released Friday ...
U.S. retail sales dropped sharply last month, in part because cold weather kept more Americans indoors and dented sales at ...
Consumers kicked off 2025 with a more prudent approach to spending, with retail sales for January falling from a month prior.
According to a Friday U.S. Census Bureau report, retail sales for January were down 0.9% from the December. But total sales ...
M/M vs.-0.2% consensus and +0.7% prior (revised from +0.4%), according to data released by the U.S. Census Bureau on Friday.
On Friday, the Census Bureau gave us retail sales data for January, which fell 0.9% from December. That’s a much bigger drop than economists were expecting. Now, we usually see a drop in retail sales ...
Commerce reported that January retail sales, at $723.9 billion, fell 0.9% annually, while posting a 4.2% annual gain, and NRF ...