Everyday Economics: Retail sales and housing suggest a resilient consumer
This week, the focus shifts to the consumer, with March retail sales and the National Association of Realtors’ pending home sales report.
Both reports are likely to point to a modest pickup from February. For retail sales, part of the gain may reflect firmer prices and support from tax refunds. But the bigger question is whether real, inflation-adjusted spending is holding up. The consumer still looks resilient, though more selective and cautious than a year ago.
On housing, there is less need to wait for the NAR report because Zillow already provides a timelier read on contract activity. Zillow’s March market report showed 281,546 newly pending listings, the second-highest monthly total since August 2022. Newly pending sales were up 4.6% from a year earlier and nearly 30% from February, the strongest March showing since 2021. Zillow attributes that strength to pent-up demand after three years of weak sales, weather-related disruption that softened activity in January and February, and a somewhat improved affordability picture from a year ago.
That suggests the home shopping season is still underway and that households had not fully pulled back as of March. Even so, the boost may prove temporary if energy prices stay elevated, mortgage rates remain high, or the labor market softens further. Zillow has already marked down its 2026 existing-home-sales outlook because higher-than-previously-expected mortgage rates could weigh on demand.
The April backdrop has improved somewhat, but not enough to declare the all-clear. Freddie Mac’s 30-year mortgage rate eased to 6.30% in the week ending April 16, down from 6.37% a week earlier. Initial jobless claims fell to 207,000 in the week ending April 11. The four-week average remains low at 209,750, while the four-week average of insured unemployment has edged down.
Energy markets are also a bit less stressed than they were earlier in the month, with shipping through the Strait of Hormuz beginning to reopen, though conditions remain fragile rather than fully normalized.
The message for now: March likely captures a consumer that was still hanging in. April looks a little better at the margin, but the durability of that improvement will depend on whether energy prices continue to move lower, mortgage rates ease further, and the labor market regains firmer footing.
Latest News Stories
WATCH: Pritzker’s rhetoric criticized; tax amnesty program; status of Guard lawsuit
Trump predicts ‘ruination’ if Supreme Court rules against his tariffs
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker uses expletive with teachers union; Paprocki reacts to assisted suicide bill
Congressional Perks: House account spending jumped 21% in 2022
Everyday Economics: Rate cut debate: Reading mixed signals in a fragile economy
Arizona looks to legal immigration with Trump’s border security
Casey Library Board Votes to Maintain $70 Non-Resident Fee
Appeals court: IT firm can’t make insurer foot bill for $28M face scan deal
Illinois soybean farmers face uncertainty amid MAHA push against seed oils
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker to sign tax, toll increases to bail out transit
IL Senate approves Department of Corrections director despite fierce opposition
Report: PJM power grid electrification faces bumpy transition