NEW YORK, April 21, 2026 — U.S. March retail sales rose 0.6% month-over-month, matching both the London Stock Exchange Group consensus estimate and February’s upwardly revised gain, the Commerce Department reported at 8:30 AM ET Tuesday, leaving S&P 500 futures little changed near 7,136 as an in-line reading offered traders no fresh directional catalyst ahead of a day dominated by Kevin Warsh’s Federal Reserve chair confirmation hearing and the looming Iran ceasefire deadline.

What the data showed — actual vs. consensus vs. prior

The Commerce Department’s advance retail trade release delivered a clean in-line print across every headline metric tracked by Wall Street consensus desks.

Headline retail sales rose +0.6% month-over-month in March, matching both the LSEG median forecast of +0.6% and February’s revised reading of +0.6%. On a year-over-year basis, the figure reflects consumers continuing to spend at a measured but resilient pace despite cumulative inflation pressure and the uncertainty introduced by shifting tariff policy.

Core retail sales excluding autos gained +0.5% month-over-month, also matching consensus and equalling February’s prior reading of +0.5%. The ex-autos measure is closely watched because it strips out the volatility introduced by large-ticket vehicle purchases, providing a cleaner read on underlying consumer demand.

The control group measure — which excludes food services, auto dealers, building materials, and gasoline stations and feeds directly into the Bureau of Economic Analysis’s personal consumption expenditure calculation — is estimated to have risen approximately +0.4%, broadly consistent with an economy expanding at a moderate pace in Q1 2026.

Data Visual
Monthly Retail Sales Growth 2025–2026
Month-over-month retail sales changes over six months, showing the trend traders are weighing against Fed rate expectations.
Monthly Retail Sales Growth 2025–2026
Values in %

Revisions to prior months were modest and carried no material upside or downside surprise. February’s headline figure was confirmed at +0.6% rather than revised lower, a detail that analysts noted removes a potential source of sequential softening in the data narrative.

Key Stat
+0.6% — second consecutive month
Back-to-back 0.6% headline gains remove the stagflation narrative’s demand-collapse leg, keeping the Fed on hold rather than cutting

Market reaction in real time

The immediate market response to Tuesday’s release was characterised by stillness rather than momentum. S&P 500 futures held at approximately 7,136 in the minutes following the 8:30 AM ET print, a level that represented a modest gain on Monday’s close of 7,109, as reported in Tuesday’s PreMarket Daily roundup.

The 10-year Treasury yield held near 4.38%, essentially unchanged from Monday’s close. An in-line retail sales number provides no grounds for a repricing of rate expectations in either direction, and the bond market reflected that calculus precisely. The 10-year has traded in a 4.28%–4.42% range over the past five sessions, buffeted more by geopolitical headlines than domestic data.

Data Visual
10-Year Treasury Yield: Recent Sessions
Ten-year yield trajectory across five sessions illustrates how rate-sensitive markets have responded to data and geopolitical headlines.
10-Year Treasury Yield: Recent Sessions
Values in %

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) was little moved, holding near the 99.8–100.2 range that has characterised trading since late last week. Dollar bulls found no incremental support from the retail data, while dollar bears found no fresh reason to press their positions. Crude oil, which has been the dominant macro variable following the Iran Hormuz disruption — as detailed in Monday’s market close report — continued to trade near recent elevated levels, with WTI holding above $85.

Nasdaq 100 futures tracked the S&P, posting a modest pre-market gain consistent with the broader futures lift. The consumer discretionary sector, most directly levered to the retail sales print, saw no outsized move given the data matched expectations precisely.

What this means for the Fed

Tuesday’s retail data lands on the most consequential Fed-related morning of the week: the Senate Banking Committee’s initial confirmation hearing for Kevin Warsh, President Trump’s nominee to succeed Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve chair. The hearing, which begins mid-morning, carries greater near-term market significance than any single data release.

From a pure data standpoint, back-to-back +0.6% headline retail sales prints in February and March do not argue for near-term rate cuts. Consumer spending — the engine of approximately 70% of U.S. GDP — has not shown the demand destruction that would compel the Fed to act pre-emptively. Fed funds futures, as tracked via CME data, continue to price the first full 25-basis-point cut no earlier than September 2026, with some desks pushing that timeline toward year-end.

Analyst Note
“A second consecutive +0.6% retail sales print reinforces the ‘no landing’ narrative for consumer spending — the data gives the Fed cover to remain on hold through Q2 and potentially Q3, especially with services inflation still sticky. The Warsh hearing is the real event risk today; any dovish pivot in his language would be a larger rates catalyst than this retail print.” — Senior U.S. economist, major Wall Street primary dealer, cited in Bloomberg Markets pre-hearing commentary, April 21, 2026

The Warsh hearing will be scrutinised for three things: his characterisation of current monetary policy as appropriately restrictive or not; his view on the Fed’s dual mandate weighting amid elevated inflation; and any indication of how he would respond to political pressure on rate decisions. Markets have priced a modestly more hawkish Fed under Warsh than under Powell, a dynamic that has contributed to the mild compression in longer-dated Treasury yields seen over the past fortnight as the nomination moved toward confirmation.

The retail data, taken in isolation, is consistent with the Fed’s current posture. However, the week ahead faces a collision of catalysts — the ceasefire expiry, Tesla earnings Wednesday, and the Warsh hearing — that make any single data print a secondary driver of policy pricing.

What traders are watching for the open

With retail sales delivering no directional surprise, the 9:30 AM ET open will be shaped primarily by the Warsh hearing tone, crude oil’s direction, and any Iran diplomatic headlines from Islamabad where peace talks are resuming. The following levels are the primary technical and macro reference points heading into the bell:

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 futures resistance 7,150 Break above re-opens path toward prior record highs; failure here keeps range-bound pattern intact
S&P 500 futures support 7,100 Monday’s cash close; a break signals renewed Iran/ceasefire risk-off and extends the week’s downside bias
10-year Treasury yield pivot 4.42% Warsh hawkish tone could push yield above this level, pressuring equity multiples; a drop below 4.30% signals safety bid
WTI crude oil watch level $87.00 Sustained move above $87 reignites stagflation trade; break below $83 signals ceasefire extension optimism

Consumer discretionary names with direct exposure to retail spending trends — department stores, e-commerce platforms, and specialty retailers — will be monitored for any opening-hour drift. However, given the data’s in-line character, the more important sector watch remains energy, where the Iran premium continues to distort cross-asset correlations as Monday’s midday session illustrated.

Conclusion

Tuesday’s March retail sales report delivered the market equivalent of a non-event: clean, in-line, and neither alarming nor exhilarating. Back-to-back monthly gains of 0.6% at the headline level and 0.5% excluding autos confirm that the U.S. consumer has not yet buckled under the weight of cumulative inflation, elevated borrowing costs, or geopolitical uncertainty — a finding that is simultaneously reassuring for growth expectations and inconvenient for those seeking imminent Federal Reserve rate relief.

For the session, the data removes one potential source of volatility but does nothing to resolve the three primary risk vectors overhanging the week: the Iran ceasefire expiry at midnight on April 22, Tesla’s Q1 earnings report on Wednesday, and whatever market-moving language Kevin Warsh delivers to the Senate Banking Committee in the hours ahead. S&P 500 futures holding at 7,136 reflects a market content to pause rather than commit ahead of those outcomes.

For the Fed, the retail data reinforces the case for patience. Two consecutive months of solid consumer spending, set against still-elevated services inflation, gives the Federal Open Market Committee no mandate to cut rates at either the May or June meetings. The policy debate heading into summer will instead be shaped by whether the energy shock from the Hormuz disruption feeds into broader price indices — a dynamic that could force the Fed into the uncomfortable position of holding rates higher even as growth moderates. The Warsh hearing, more than any data point this week, will define how markets price that risk through year-end.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is a pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily with a focus on overnight futures, early session movers, and the catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. He tracks S&P 500,...