Flash ReportLunar New Year Recap: China’s Retail Sales Grow at the Slowest Pace in Years Coresight Research February 14, 2019 Executive SummaryAccording to China’s Ministry of Commerce, total retail and food-service sales in China during the Lunar New Year period (February 4-10) rose to ¥1.0 trillion (US$148.7 billion), growing by 8.5% year over year. Lunar New Year’s Eve dinners, family reunion feasts and dinners with relatives and friends dominated festival dining consumption, and the number of orders for fully- or half-cooked dinners sold online rose noticeably. This year’s 8.5% growth in holiday sales was the slowest since 2005, indicating that Chinese consumers are becoming increasingly frugal amid uncertainty caused by the U.S.-China trade war, the changing macro environment and a slowing Chinese economy. Please Login to read the full report. Not a member? To access this content for free, register for a free account. This document was generated for Other research you may be interested in: Sentiment; Tariff Perceptions; Inflation Reactions—Taking the Consumer Pulse on Essentials: US Consumer Survey InsightsWeekly UK Store Openings and Closures Tracker 2025, Week 50: Watches of Switzerland Closes 10 StoresThree Data Points We’re Watching This Week, Week 24: Consumer Sentiment Improves: US vs. ChinaShoptalk Spring 2025: Day Three—Community Building, Earning Loyalty and Enhancing Search Are Top of Mind