- Former Merrill CEO Thain Defends Wall Street Bonuses
- House Leaders Want Job Creation Bill Before Year-End
- Obama to Continue Yuan Rhetoric, Visit Great Wall
- Boats Seized in Madoff Scandal Sell for $2 Million
- Economy, Stocks to Grow Faster Than Many Think: ING
- Fed's Exit Strategy: How It May Raise Borrowing Costs
- 15 Richest Members of Congress
- Motor Trend Names a US Sedan Its 2010 Car of the Year
- Costco Stops Carrying Coca-Cola Over Pricing Fight
- Best Sector Plays for 2010: Citi's Levkovich
- Pulse of Private Equity
- Abbott, Arbiter & Avoidance
- Can YouTube Revolutionize Citizen Journalism?
- I Have to Leggo My Eggo
- Appraisals Now Center Stage in Housing Recovery
- Expect Stocks to Rise 15-20% by Mid-2010: Chief Investor
- Profiting from This Volatile Options Expiration Week: Analyst
- Nov. 17: Unusual Volume Leaders
- Honolulu mayor inks labor pact for rail project
- McCain adviser: Palin’s book is fiction
- Soros hedge fund takes stake in Ford Motor
- Democrats promise jobs bill
- Senate weighs long-term care program
- Foreclosure proceedings for N. Colo. mall begin
- Okla. ed board wants use of Rainy Day Fund now
- Nicolas Cage sued by former money manager
- Judge says ND company ignored IRS warnings
WASHINGTON - Businesses likely slashed wholesale inventories for a record 13th consecutive month in September. But analysts expect sales rose for a sixth straight month.
Steadily rising sales could encourage businesses to restock shelves, boost production and bolster an economic recovery. The concern is that consumer spending, which accounts for 70 percent of economic activity, could falter as various government stimulus programs begin to wane.
Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters expect inventories held by wholesalers dropped 1 percent in September, following a 1.3 percent decline in August.
Wholesale sales likely rose 0.6 percent, down from a 1 percent gain in August, which was the biggest increase since June 2008.
The Commerce Department is scheduled to release the report at 10 a.m. EST Friday.
Car sales soared in August because of the government's Cash for Clunkers program. But sales fell sharply in September after the incentives program ended.
General Motors Co. reported that its sales plunged 45 percent in September from the previous year, while Chrysler Group LLC reported a 42 percent decline. Ford Motor Co. reported a 5.1 percent decline.
But October's retail sales results were the best since April 2008, according to a report by the International Council of Shopping Centers-Goldman Sachs. Sales at stores open at least a year rose 2.1 percent, compared with a 4.2 percent drop in October 2008. The October results beat estimates for a 1 percent gain and followed a surprising 0.6 percent increase in September.
Sales at stores open at least a year are considered a key indicator of a retailer's health. Bright spots included Costco Wholesale Corp.; TJX Cos., which operates T.J. Maxx and Marshalls; and Gap Inc. Sales at most teen merchants were weak.
Wholesale inventories are goods held by distributors who generally buy from manufacturers and sell to retailers. They make up about 25 percent of all business stockpiles. Factories hold another third of inventories and retailers hold the rest.
The decline in inventories is the longest stretch on government records that date to 1992. The previous record was nine straight declines during a period that covered the nation's last recession in 2001.
- How to put some green into your portfolio.
- Returning from a Ron Paul political rally, one supporter was held at an airport due to the amount of cash he was carrying. NYT reports.
- Chances for a climate change treaty look dim at the Copenhagen conference.
- Online social networking phenomenon Facebook is the source of New Oxford American Dictionary’s word of the year.
- Hard times in Hollywood are boosting job applications in the porn business.
- Restaurant reviews have been around for awhile, but one man is betting that hungry sports fans are looking for one thing only.









