With first-quarter earnings from most retailers on the books, investors have turned skittish. Earnings growth has slowed, consumer spending is shaky, and a variety of chains expressed reservations about the future.
As usual, prognosticators are working with a variety of conflicting data in evaluating the sector's prospects. But the S&P Retail Index has dropped steadily so far this year, down 9%, representing a continuous lowering of expectations on Wall Street. Meanwhile, Thomson First Call estimated that earnings growth for retailers has slowed to around 8% in the first quarter, down from 20% for the fourth quarter of 2004 and down 62% in the year-ago period.
Most analysts agree that consumers hit a soft patch during the quarter that was mostly attributable to high gas prices and bad weather. The situation bears a striking resemblance to the slowdown that hampered the stock market last summer. Back then, some observers proclaimed that consumers finally had reached the end of their spending rope, only to be proven wrong when a healthy holiday followed the president's re-election. ...
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