On paper, May's retail report looked strong. Americans spent 0.9% more than in April, nearly double what was expected.
Look closer, and the picture shifts. A third of that gain came from people paying more at the pump, not buying more stuff.
The Headline Number Hides The Pinch
Retail sales hit $763.7 billion in May, the Commerce Department said. That is up 6.9% from a year ago.
Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had only expected a 0.5% gain. The big beat made the headline look strong.
Sales at gas stations jumped 3.4% on the month. They soared 26.5% from May 2025.
That is mostly a price story, not a demand one. Pump prices are still high since U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran in February pushed oil up.
Tehran answered by squeezing the Strait of Hormuz. The figures are not adjusted for inflation, which makes the headline gain look bigger than it really is.
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Where Consumers Are Pulling Back
Food sales fell 0.1% in May. Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics said that could mean people are driving less to save on gas.
Sales at grocery stores were flat, and shoppers pulled back at bars and restaurants.
Online sales picked up. Tombs said that could mean shoppers are skipping the trip to the store.
Most of those signs point to a buyer thinking twice about every trip. The mix tells the Fed and Wall Street the same thing.
Spending is still high. But the cracks under it are starting to show.
What The Fed Is Watching
The data lands as new Fed chairman Kevin Warsh held his first press briefing this week. Solid sales make it harder to argue for lower rates.
Pao-Lin Tien, an assistant professor at George Washington University, told AFP the economy can probably hold off a slump this year if the Iran war ends.
A rebound, she said, would lift the stock market and feed back into more spending. That loop is exactly what the Fed wants to slow down.
Tombs warned the spring spending boost is partly a "sugar rush" from big tax refunds. That fades fast.
For investors, the Fed call is a key one. A hawkish Warsh wants to keep rates high.
A weaker buyer would push the other way. Both sides of that fight will show up in the next round of retail prints.
Worth Noting
The May print proves the buyer is still standing. What keeps them standing looks more fragile than the top line suggests.
For investors, the retail report is a reminder to read past the big number. The healthy beat masks a pump-driven gain and a quiet pullback in dining and groceries.
The buyer still has cash to spend. The cash is just going to fewer places, and a lot of it is going to the gas station.
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