KEY POINTS
  • April retail sales plunged a shocking 16.4%, worse than the 12.3% expected by economists, but one category was higher: online sales.
  • Analysts say the divide between online merchants and brick-and-mortar stores is growing, and a trend toward restructuring and consolidation is being accelerated by the coronavirus crisis.
  • The stocks of retail companies traded higher after the government report, and analysts said earnings of many retailers next week will show which companies could come out winners and which will not.
A shopper wears a protective mask while browsing through the Island Cotton Company store as the state of Florida enters phase one of the plan to reopen the state on May 4, 2020 in Stuart, Florida.

A shocking 16.4% plunge in April retail sales signals an even bleaker outlook for some brick-and-mortar retailers and shows a widening divide between the industry's winners and losers.

Consumers curtailed spending on nonessentials in April, after states shut down their economies to prevent spread of the coronavirus, the Census Bureau reported Friday. Economists had expected a 12.3% decline. Retail sales fell a revised 8.3% in March, but state shutdowns did not start until the second half of the month, and losses were offset by signs that consumers hoarded food and other goods.