Skip to main content

Conditions shaping up for successful holiday season, says NRF chief economist

Happy women friends are shopping for presents at Christmas. People holiday sale shopping concept; Shutterstock ID 2376030343
A near-record 197-million people shopped during the holiday weekend from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday.

Strong results during the third quarter and continued growth in key economic data since then have set the stage for a solid holiday season.

That’s according to National Retail Federation chief economist Jack Kleinhenz who said that, based on data seen so far, conditions are shaping up for a successful holiday retail season. He noted that U.S. economic growth remained strong in the third quarter, with gross domestic product expanding more than many estimates of the economy’s long-run potential capacity.

“Personal consumption continues to provide the horsepower behind the economy, as it has throughout this expansion,” Kleinhenz added.

Kleinhenz’s comments came in the December edition of NRF’s Monthly Economic Review, which said NRF stands by its forecast that retail sales during the November-December holiday season will grow between 2.5% and 3.5% over 2023. A near-record 197-million people shopped during the holiday weekend from Thanksgiving through Cyber Monday, and 58% of holiday shoppers had started in early November.

Advertisement - article continues below
Advertisement

“Consumers’ view of the economy has improved and they remain supportive of retail sales,” Kleinhenz said, adding that the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey climbed for the fourth consecutive month to 71.8 in November, reaching its highest level since April. 

GDP grew at an annual rate of 2.8% in the third quarter while personal consumption was up 3.5% year over year. Gross domestic income, which measures the income earned while producing the goods and services measured by GDP, lagged GDP for the second quarter in a row at 2.2%, which “added to the argument that the economy is slowing, but neither indicates that growth has halted,” Kleinhenz said. NRF expects fourth-quarter GDP will be up by an annualized pace of 2%.

October saw only 12,000 new jobs created amid two hurricanes and multiple major labor strikes. Still, unemployment held steady at 4.1%, employment was up by 104,000 jobs on a three-month average, and consumer spending “currently remains on solid footing,” Kleinhenz said. 

Disposable income was up 5.1% year over year in October and employee compensation, a key measure of wages and salaries, was up 5.7%. Consumption was up 5.4% even as the personal saving rate increased to 4.4%.

Year-over-year inflation as measured by the Federal Reserve’s preferred Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index rose to 2.3% in October from 2.1% in September but has been on a downward trend and is close to the Fed’s target of 2%.

X
This ad will auto-close in 10 seconds