The impact of the pandemic on the
nation’s economy will be a key factor in retail sales during the 2021 holiday
season, but the National Retail Federation (NRF) is nonetheless confident in
its forecast for record growth as US consumers are spending because they can.
“There are several factors coming together to have a
major impact on the holiday outlook, but household fundamentals are a bright
spot in the uncertain present,” NRF chief economist Jack Kleinhenz said. “US
consumers are in a very favourable position going into the last months of the
year and are spending because they can.”
Kleinhenz’s remarks came in the November issue of
NRF’s Monthly Economic Review, which expanded on the reasoning behind the NRF’s forecast last week that 2021
holiday retail sales during November and December will grow between 8.5-10.5%
over 2020 to a total of between US$843.4bn and $859bn. Even at the low end of the forecast, that would be
both the largest growth rate – topping last year’s 8.2% – and the largest total
amount – beating last year’s $777.3bn – on record.
The forecast excludes automobile dealers, gasoline stations and restaurants to
focus on core retail, but includes online sales, which are expected to be up
between 11-15% to between $218.3bn and $226.2bn.
Kleinhenz said the pandemic raises the question of whether covid-19 cases will
continue their downward trend and whether that will increase consumer
confidence and lead to increased spending. And if consumers spend more, will it
continue to be on retail goods or will spending start to shift to services if
they become more comfortable travelling, going out to restaurants or attending
sports and entertainment events?
NRF’s forecast model looks at those factors along with
disposable income, past retail sales, employment, wages, weather, energy prices
and other variables. Despite “complex mechanics and forces at work,” the
outlook is favourable for strong retail sales growth this holiday season.
A “savings buffer” of about $2.5 trillion accumulated
by consumers who have largely stayed home rather than dine out or travel during
the pandemic has “supercharged” spending. In the meantime, income is growing in
the form of more jobs, more hours, and higher wages reflecting businesses’
competition for workers during the current labour shortage. Household wealth
hit another record high during the second quarter (the latest data available)
and has boosted consumer confidence.
Spending has continued at a brisk pace throughout 2021 – up 14.5%
year-over-year for the first nine months – and has returned to pre-pandemic
levels for many retail categories. While some individuals who lost jobs last
year still face financial difficulty, data tracked by Harvard University shows
spending by low-income consumers was up 22.3% at the end of September compared
with pre-pandemic January 2020. The number appears to reflect enhanced
unemployment benefits and other stimulus money such as the new child tax
credit.
Kleinhenz said the strong growth in income and “stockpiled savings” should help
spending overcome inflation that has been driven both by consumer demand and
supply chain disruptions. The challenge when – and if – sales begin to fall
will be whether the drop is caused by weaker demand or reduced product
availability.
Kleinhenz said higher gasoline prices and higher energy costs for home heating
will divert some money that could otherwise go to retail sales, especially with
weather forecasters saying a La Niña pattern will likely bring cold weather
this winter. Nonetheless, a La Niña has coincided with stronger retail sales in
the past.
By Just Style