Other data on Friday showed consumer sentiment
rising to a seven-year high this month, also positive for the
spending outlook as the country nears its traditional period of
frenzied holiday shopping.
A key measure of retail sales, which account for about one third
of consumer spending, snapped back from a weak September, buoyed
by bigger receipts for clothing and sporting goods.
Economists said that suggested fundamental strength even as a
drop in gasoline prices held the gain in overall sales to just
0.3 percent. Receipts at gasoline stations dropped 1.5 percent.
"(The) numbers bode well for the crucial holiday shopping
season," said Paul Diggle, an economist at Capital Economics in
London. Americans turn their shopping into overdrive in late
November ahead of December's Christmas holiday.
The key reading that strips out volatile elements like gasoline,
autos, building materials and food services climbed a
higher-than-expected 0.5 percent. The gain bolstered the view
that U.S. consumers are ready to play a bigger role in
supporting the recent acceleration in economic growth.
Other data showed an improving jobs market and lower gasoline
prices lifted consumer spirits in early November. The Thomson
Reuters/University of Michigan sentiment index rose to 89.4, its
highest level since July 2007.
Another component of the index, however, showed Americans'
expectations for long-term inflation fell, a potentially
worrisome development for Federal Reserve officials who would
like to move unusually low inflation higher.
Separately, Labor Department data showed import prices fell 1.3
percent in September, as cheaper oil and a strong dollar made it
less expensive for Americans to buy foreign goods.
Slowing economic growth outside the United States has pushed oil
prices lower in recent months, a boon for American shoppers.
"Consumers are spending what they are saving at the gas pump,"
said Camilla Sutton, a currency strategist at Scotiabank in
Toronto.
The dollar has gained more than 10 percent against the
currencies of U.S. trading partners since June on expectations a
stronger economy will lead the Fed to raise interest rates.
(Reporting by Jason Lange in Washington; Additional reporting by
Rodrigo Campos and Michael Connor in New York; Editing by Andrea
Ricci)
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