By Jessica Wohl
CHICAGO (Reuters) - U.S. retailers, including Limited Brands Inc
This year's later Labor Day holiday was expected to push a good chunk of sales from August into September. But consumers' concerns about the economy, especially unemployment hovering close to 10 percent, weighed on spending.
Early results show that some retailers bucked the recent trend of consumers cutting back sharply on discretionary purchases. But close to 20 chains, including department stores, had not yet issued their results early on Thursday morning.
Limited, whose chains include Victoria's Secret, posted a 1 percent increase in sales at stores open at least a year. Analysts expected a 2.4 percent decline.
Children's Place Retail Stores Inc also reported an unexpected 4 percent rise in comparable sales. The results were aided by strong growth online, which the company includes in that figure.
"To see a retailer be very weak this September means that there probably has been a fundamental shift in consumption of their product," said Doug Conn, managing director and retail credit specialist at Hexagon Securities.
Analysts had forecast an average decline of 1.1 percent in September sales at stores open at least a year, according to Thomson Reuters data. That would be the smallest monthly drop since September 2008, when same-store sales fell 0.9 percent.
Retailers have posted consecutive declines in monthly same-store sales since September 2008, when Lehman Brothers'
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(Reporting by Jessica Wohl, additional reporting by Abhishek Takle in Banagalore; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)