Retail sales increased 0.2% in June 2026, the weakest monthly gain since early in the year. This deceleration shows that headline spending cooled after a stronger May. The pattern also aligns with broader signals of moderation across goods categories. Gasoline-driven drag on totals: Receipts at gasoline stations fell 5.3% as average pump prices dropped sharply. This decline reduced headline growth but did not reflect weaker demand. Instead, it was a price effect that temporarily pulled down top-line sales. The decline in pump prices echoed a fall from $4.61 to $4.18 per gallon during June. Core categories point to resilience: Ex‑gasoline retail sales rose a much stronger 0.7%, with notable gains in autos, nonstore retail, and various discretionary categories. This indicates consumers were still spending, especially in areas less affected by fuel prices. The breadth of these increases suggests the underlying demand backdrop remains solid.But then you look at the actual report, and the growth in non-gas sales doesn't happen for most of the retail economy. Change in retail sales, June 2026
Motor vehicle/parts dealers +2.640 billion
Gas/gas stations -3.372 billion
Non-store retailers +2.699 billion
All other retail categories -0.290 billion And "all other retail categories" accounted for 55% of all retail sales in May. If a majority of retail sales are going down in the aggregate, in a time when those prices outside of gasoline are still generally growing, that's not a good number. But because gas prices declined through early July due to optimism (rolls eyes) about peace in the Middle East and resulting increases in oil supplies coming, consumers have been in a better mood.
The University of Michigan's Surveys of Consumers said on Friday its Consumer Sentiment Index rose to 54.4 this month, the highest reading since February, from a final reading of 49.5 in June. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index rising to 51.0. The survey was conducted from June 23 to July 13, with more than 70% of interviews completed before the collapse of the ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran last week, which pushed oil prices to a one-month high. Gasoline prices have risen in response.Oh? So maybe things are different now because national gas prices are set to go back over $4 a gallon this week? And as UW-Madison's Menzie Chinn points out in Econbrowser, just because consumer sentiment was up in June and early July, it doesn't mean people think things are going well, and the trend is still negative over the last year. Because of the contined consumer spending through June and the break in gas prices lowering inflation last month, it's likely that we see a solid GDP growth figure around 2% when 2nd quarter numbers are released in 11 days. But what seemed like a one-time annoyance of high gas prices is more likely to be several more weeks of gas prices exceeding or near multi-year highs. We also are now facing a food safety scare that will take produce off the market and likely suppress demand in general, and numerous weather events hitting before the main US hurricane season even begins. It makes the "inflation has peaked and the economy will keep rolling" takes that I've been seeing following last week's CPI and PPI reports sound very premature, if not outright stupid. Q3 is not off to a good start, and the outlook seems more likely to be bad than good. So watch for June's optimism to quickly reverse as Trump's War cranks back up, health insurance costs are set to go up by double digits, and nothing better is coming along.












