Friday, May 8, 2009

Retail Rebound?

May 7 (Bloomberg) -- Wal-Mart Stores, the world’s largest retailer, reported comparable-store sales for April that rose more than analysts expected. Revenue from U.S. stores open at least a year increased 5%, excluding gasoline sales, in the four weeks through May 1, the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company said today in a statement. That exceeded the 3% average estimate compiled by Retail Metrics Inc.

U.S. store visits rose the most in seven months, spurred by demand in the grocery, health, home and entertainment categories, Wal-Mart said. Some consumers spent more freely on sporting goods and other discretionary merchandise after gasoline prices and payroll taxes dropped. The shift of Easter to April 12 from March 28 in 2008 also lifted sales.

Target Corp. announced Thursday that net retail sales for the four weeks ended May 2 were $4.45 billion, up 4.5% from the comparable period last year.Minneapolis-based Target (NYSE: TGT) said first-quarter highlights included better-than-expected same-store sales and gross margins, favorable retail expense performance and credit card results that were in line with prior guidance. Target’s April results far exceeded those for the first two month’s of the company’s fiscal first quarter. Same-store sales were down 6.3% in March and 4.1% in February.

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