May retail sales jump, import prices up
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Total sales at U.S. retailers rose 1.0 percent in May as many consumers had more spending cash in their wallets from government rebate checks.
The Commerce Department reported an increase last month that was twice as much as expected by Wall Street economists polled before the report. Taking out the higher prices consumers paid for gasoline, sales still rose by a strong 0.8 percent, the biggest increase in a year.
Excluding autos, sales rose 1.2 percent, the biggest rise in six months and well beyond the 0.7 percent rise economists were expecting.
U.S. import prices rose 2.3 percent in May as expected, capping the biggest three month increase in more than 17 years, as petroleum import prices climbed, a government report showed on Thursday.
The number of U.S. workers filing new claims for jobless benefits rose more than expected last week. Initial claims for state unemployment insurance benefits jumped to 384,000 in the week ended June 7 from a revised 359,000 for the prior week, the Labor Department said.
The four-week average of new jobless claims, which is considered a more accurate measure of employment trends since it evens out weekly volatility, climbed to 371,500 from a revised 369,000 in the prior week.
COMMENTS:
THOMAS DI GALOMA, HEAD OF U.S. TREASURY TRADING AT JEFFERIES & CO. IN NEW YORK:
"All the data is pushing through on the strong side."
"There is a little bit of surprise here that the economy is indeed a little stronger than people expected, and with all the ECB and Fed rhetoric on inflation the market is focused more on that."
JOHN O'BRIEN, SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, MKM PARTNERS LLC, CLEVELAND, OHIO:
"The consumer is someone who continues to buck the trend of $4 (a gallon) gasoline and an inability to use their homes as a second bank account."
"I think some of the advance (in retail sales) might have been due to the stimulus checks going out ... "It seems to
Wal-Marts and Cotstcos seem to reaping the benefits of those checks."
"I think the combination of strong retail sales and oil trading $3.00 lower should bode well for the (stock) market today."
DAVID POWELL, CURRENCY STRATEGIST, BANK OF AMERICA, NEW YORK: Continued...



