U.S. chain stores posted a gain of 4.5 percent for the fiscal month
of January on a year-over-year basis according to the International Council of Shopping Centers (ICSC). The January industry performance was
the strongest since September 2011 (+5.5 percent).
The monthly sales boost to drug stores was helped by a substantial
rise in flu shots administered at the pharmacies. Further contributing
to the above average industry gain was end-of-season bargain hunting at
department and apparel stores.
“Despite worries of a ‘fiscal drag’ due to higher payroll taxes,
consumers were out shopping for bargains and clearance items,” said
Michael P. Niemira, vice president of research and chief economist for
ICSC.
For the fiscal year of 2012, U.S. chain store sales posted a 2.1
percent gain–held back by a 4.5 percent decline in the drug store
segment. Excluding drug stores, industry sales rose 4.4 percent in the
fiscal year of 2012, which was moderately weaker than the industry’s
2011 strong gain of 5.3 percent.
For February, ICSC research
anticipates that the sales pace will moderate to 2.75 percent-3.0
percent in total and about 3.5 percent 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
January. Industry sales aggregates are compiled for "comparable-store"
or "same-store" sales and for total store sales. Those data are
presented as an index. Comparable-store sales are also compiled for
specialized-industry groupings, which include aggregates for apparel
chain stores, department stores, discount stores, drug stores, footwear
stores and wholesale clubs.
Founded in 1957, ICSC is the premier global trade association of the
shopping center industry. Its more than 58,000 members in over 90
countries include shopping center owners, developers, managers,
marketing specialists, investors, retailers and brokers, as well as
academics and public officials.
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