US retail sales strong in February; an increase in the price of petrol will affect spending

Written by Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) – U.S. retail prices rose by the most in seven months in February as car prices rose and temperatures soared, but rising gasoline prices due to war in the Middle East were expected to dampen spending in coming months.

A late report from the Commerce Department on Wednesday suggested that the economy was in solid shape before the US-Israel war with Iran. The conflict, which began in late February, has sent global oil prices up more than 50%, and the country’s retail price of gasoline this week rose to $4 a gallon for the first time in more than three years.

A prolonged war and further increases in fuel prices could offset some of the expected increase in consumer spending and the economy as a whole from the tax cuts, economists have warned. They expected the conflict to weigh on growth in the second quarter.

“I expect that consumer spending will be lower in the first half of the year than it would have been without the increase in gasoline prices, but I predict that the price of energy will fall significantly in a few months, which will allow real money to return in the second half of the year,” said Stephen Stanley, chief economist for the US at Santander US Capital Markets.

Retail prices rose 0.6%, the biggest increase since last July, after falling as much as 0.1% in January, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said. Economists polled by Reuters had retail sales, which are mostly goods and not adjusted for inflation, rising 0.5% after an initial decline of 0.2% in January.

The Census Bureau is holding back data releases after delays caused by last year’s government shutdown.

One of the increases in retail sales reflected higher gasoline prices, which had begun to rise in anticipation of the Middle East war. In addition to expensive gasoline, consumers are also facing higher prices at the store from President Donald Trump’s tariffs.

The broad increase in sales was driven by tax returns. The average refund was $350 through March 20 compared to the same period in 2025, Internal Revenue Service data showed.

“Tax refunds keep the economy in the first quarter,” said Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS. “Cheap consumer goods at least until the tax refund ends.”

Receipts at auto dealers rose 1.2% amid promotions and discounts, after falling 0.7% in January.

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