U.S. chain-store sales rose by 3.9 percent (excluding drug stores) for
the fiscal month of September on a year-over-year basis according to the
International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC). Wholesale clubs (+6.0
percent) and apparel (+5.0 percent) led the way for the month, while
drug stores (-8.6 percent) continued to drag down the aggregate (+0.9
percent including drug stores).
"September industry sales
remained healthy--though were more subdued than in August or for the
year-to-date trend--due to three factors: (1) a more difficult
comparison with the September 2011 sales pace (+6.3%); (2) a more
concentrated back-to-school shopping season in August 2012 than is
typical of most years when it tends to run from mid-July to
mid-September; and (3) a promotion that boosted August sales pace by an
estimated 0.3% higher than trend," said Michael P. Niemira, vice
president of research and chief economist for ICSC.
For October,
ICSC research anticipates that the sales pace will remain consistent
with a to 3.5 – 4.5 percent increase (excluding drug stores).
ICSC
Chain Store Sales Trends is a monthly report on the U.S. retail
industry's sales performance based on an ICSC preliminary compilation of
publicly-available sales for 22 chain stores during the month of
September.
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