In April 2018, retail sales in Canada fell by 1.2% compared to March, when their growth was 0.8%, to 49 billion 546 million Canadian dollars, according to the statistics of the country. Analysts had expected a zero change in the indicator. Compared with the same month last year, sales increased by 1.6%. Sales excluding cars fell by 0.1% to 36 billion 363 million Canadian dollars. In annual terms, the indicator grew by 2.2%. According to another report of Statistical Agency of Canada, the annual inflation for May remained at the level of April at 2.2. Compared to the previous month, consumer prices increased by 0.1%.
Backed by record-low mortgage rates, U.S. home sales reached its strongest record in June. However, the outlook for the housing market remained murky as low inventory and high unemployment rate pressed amid the virus crisis. Existing home ...
Australian retail sales advanced 2.4% in June. This came as an upbeat figure following a 16.5% increase seen in May as the land down under resumed its economic operations from coronavirus-related lockdowns. The country’s retail sales ...
Renault SA (RENA.PA) announced on Monday that its global car sales fell by 34.9% in the first half of the year due to the impact of the coronavirus pandemic. However, the company said that it had seen some signs of recovery in June. The French ...
European new car registrations fell in June year-on-year, but showed some improvement when compared to May 2020 as lockdown measures continue to loosen across the region, Tuesday’s industry data showed. In June, passenger car sales were ...
The dollar firmed on Thursday as a decline in Chinese retail sales worried investors, while the rest of the market anticipates the EU summit this weekend. The euro was down 0.1% to $1.1401, while the dollar stood at 106.95 on the yen. The ...