
U.S. Retail Sales Beat Expectations as Consumer Resilience Complicates the Fed’s Rate Calculus
U.S. retail sales climbed 0.9% in May 2026 to $763.7 billion, easily outpacing the 0.5% consensus forecast and marking the sharpest monthly gain since March 2025, according to Commerce Department data released June 17. Excluding volatile gasoline station receipts, sales rose 0.7% — the same figure posted by the control group that feeds directly into GDP calculations. The data arrived alongside a National Association of Realtors report showing pending home sales jumped 3.8% to a six-month high, reinforcing a pattern that has become the central tension in Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh’s early tenure: the American consumer is not behaving like someone living in a high-rate environment. Key Takeaways May retail sales rose 0.9% month-over-month, with core retail sales (excluding gas) up 0.7%, both exceeding forecasts. The NAR pending home sales index rose 3.8% in May to 76.8, its fourth consecutive monthly gain and highest level in six months, despite 30-year mortgage rates averaging 6.44%. New York Federal Reserve research published in May found that spending growth since 2023 has been driven almost entirely by households earning more than $125,000 per year, with high-income spending up 7.6% cumulatively versus just 1% for low-income households. The Fed held rates at 3.50%–3.75%













































