Today: 29 April 2026
US Retail Sales Beat Forecasts, PPI Rises: What Could Move Stocks Next
14 January 2026
2 mins read

US Retail Sales Beat Forecasts, PPI Rises: What Could Move Stocks Next

WASHINGTON, Jan 14, 2026, 08:58 (EST)

  • U.S. retail sales climbed 0.6% in November, beating the 0.4% forecast, driven by a rebound in car purchases.
  • Producer prices rose 0.2% in November, driven mainly by higher energy-related goods costs.
  • Investors are shifting focus to existing home sales, oil inventory figures, and a series of Fed speeches scheduled for later Wednesday.

U.S. retail sales climbed beyond expectations in November, while producer prices edged higher. This fresh data offers investors insight into consumer demand and inflation pressures as delayed government reports gradually surface.

Stock index futures slipped in early trading as investors weighed big-bank earnings and wrestled with the implications of “sticky” inflation for the Fed’s upcoming decisions. Reuters

Retail sales rose 0.6% in November, rebounding from a revised 0.1% decline in October, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said. Analysts surveyed by Reuters had forecast a 0.4% increase. The data release is still playing catch-up after a 43-day government shutdown delayed reporting.

Bank of America Securities highlighted a growing divide in spending across income brackets in its Consumer Prism report, describing the gap as “substantial and persistent.” The firm noted that a “K-shape” pattern is especially clear when it comes to discretionary spending.

Producer prices, which track what businesses charge one another before goods hit the consumer, climbed 0.2% in November, according to the Labor Department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. The index showed a 3.0% increase compared to the same month last year. Meanwhile, a core measure that excludes food, energy, and trade margins also rose 0.2% for the month and 3.5% year over year.

Tuesday’s inflation data revealed that consumer prices continued to climb, but at a tempered rate. The CPI increased 2.7% over the 12 months ending in December, with “core” inflation, which strips out food and energy, ticking up 2.6%, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

Food and shelter costs continued to rattle both politicians and markets in the latest report. “Families may not follow core inflation numbers closely, but they notice grocery and restaurant prices right away,” said Sung Won Sohn, finance and economics professor at Loyola Marymount University. Reuters

The Fed is widely expected to keep its benchmark rate steady between 3.50% and 3.75% at its meeting on Jan. 27-28, though the timing of any rate cuts remains uncertain. Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon, cautioned that policymakers “may lean more hawkish” to affirm their independence amid rising scrutiny of Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Reuters

Wednesday’s U.S. data slate kicks off with existing home sales at 10:00 a.m. ET, followed by weekly crude oil inventories at 10:30 a.m. The Fed’s Beige Book drops at 2:00 p.m. ET, offering a district-level look at economic conditions ahead of policy discussions. Several Fed officials are set to speak as well.

Mortgage applications data arrived early this morning, ahead of the Mortgage Bankers Association’s weekly report set for 7:00 a.m. ET — a key trigger for housing stocks sensitive to interest rates.

Yet the danger for markets lies in the fact that the “new” data remain backward-looking and vulnerable to revisions following shutdown disruptions. If energy-driven producer prices surge again, or if consumer spending holds up despite rising food and rent costs, the Fed may stay cautious, forcing a quick reprice of rate-cut expectations.

The week remains packed. Thursday brings jobless claims and regional factory surveys, while Friday rolls in industrial production data and homebuilder sentiment. Markets get plenty of opportunities to shift their stance again.

Stock Market Today

  • Tuya (TUYA) Stock Analysis: Fair Pricing Amid Recent Pullback and Strong Long-Term Gains
    April 29, 2026, 12:05 PM EDT. Tuya (NYSE:TUYA) shares closed at $2.28, down 3.0% in one day and 6.2% over seven days, contrasting with a 3-year total shareholder return of 28.7%. The company reported $321.8 million in annual revenue and $57.9 million net income. Trading at a price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 24.1x, Tuya's valuation is slightly above its fair value estimate of 23.5x and peers' average of 21.7x, but below the broader U.S. Software industry average of 30.4x. This reflects investor confidence in its profitability and growth prospects, with earnings expected to grow nearly 10% annually. Risks include dependence on Chinese market demand and relatively rich valuation compared to peers. The stock trades just 0.9% below its intrinsic value according to discounted cash flow (DCF) estimates, suggesting near fair pricing.

Latest article

Mastercard Stock Jumps Before Earnings as Visa’s Big Beat Sends a Fresh Signal

Mastercard Stock Jumps Before Earnings as Visa’s Big Beat Sends a Fresh Signal

29 April 2026
Mastercard shares climbed 3.8% to $526.90 Wednesday after Visa beat profit estimates and raised its outlook, sending Visa shares up 8.7%. Mastercard reports first-quarter results Thursday. The company expanded its Start Path program this week to focus on business payments, with fintech Glass joining to work on public-sector procurement. Mastercard does not lend or issue cards, earning mainly from transaction fees.
GE HealthCare Technologies Inc. Stock Sinks as Tariffs and Chip Costs Force Profit Cut

GE HealthCare Technologies Inc. Stock Sinks as Tariffs and Chip Costs Force Profit Cut

29 April 2026
GE HealthCare cut its 2026 profit forecast Wednesday, citing higher chip, oil, and freight costs, as well as tariffs and a supplier issue. Shares fell nearly 13% to $59.75. First-quarter revenue rose 7.4% to $5.13 billion, but net income dropped to $389 million from $564 million a year earlier. The company also announced a reorganization, merging its Imaging and Advanced Visualization units.
Applied Materials (AMAT) Faces Fresh China Shock After U.S. Targets Hua Hong Shipments

Applied Materials (AMAT) Faces Fresh China Shock After U.S. Targets Hua Hong Shipments

29 April 2026
The U.S. Commerce Department ordered Applied Materials, Lam Research, and KLA to halt some chip-tool shipments to China’s Hua Hong, Reuters reported. The move targets shipments linked to facilities believed capable of advanced chip production. Applied reported $2.10 billion in China revenue last quarter, or 30% of its total. Shares in Applied, Lam, and KLA traded lower after the news.
Bank of America stock: BAC dips premarket after Q4 beat as interest-income outlook takes center stage
Previous Story

Bank of America stock: BAC dips premarket after Q4 beat as interest-income outlook takes center stage

Ford stock dips as CEO Farley calls USMCA talks ‘critical’ after Trump remarks
Next Story

Ford stock dips as CEO Farley calls USMCA talks ‘critical’ after Trump remarks

Go toTop