(Bloomberg) -- U.S. stores reported broad-based gains in activity last month as 10 of 13 major sectors increased sales from a year earlier.
But, just how concentrated are the gains? The dominance of online merchants is becoming increasingly clear. In the past year, Americans' boosted spending to "nonstore retailers" while clothing, food & beverage and building-material stores felt the brunt of consumers' changing habits.
Spending at nonstore retailers, mostly Internet merchants, increased by $6.4 billion from a year earlier to $62.04 billion on an annualized basis. The nonstore retailer category is now a larger spending category than restaurant and bars.
Given the pace of growth, nonstore spending will likely pass food and beverage -- mainly grocery stores -- spending soon and move to the second largest retail category behind vehicles and parts.
Read More: U.S. Retail Sales Post Broad Rise
To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Tanzi in Washington at atanzi@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Alex Tanzi at atanzi@bloomberg.net, Wei Lu
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