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US consumers are making economic doomers look silly

Americans are still spending enthusiastically, but their focus is on experiences rather than goods

June 26, 2024 / 16:57 IST
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US Consumer
The reality is more nuanced and reflects how consumer spending habits have shifted.

After being so consistently wrong in recent years about how the US economy and households would perform coming out of the pandemic, doomsayers should have learned their lesson. But there they were in full force after Pool Corp. said late Monday that it was lowering its earnings outlook because households aren’t installing backyard swimming pools as they once did. Here’s how Pool put it:
“The most recent pool permit data suggests persistently weak demand for new pool construction, and with the peak selling season almost complete, we now believe that new pool construction activity could be down 15% to 20% for the year with remodel activity down as much as 15%.”

This was clearly a shock, as evidenced by Pool’s shares plunging more than 11% at one point Tuesday, the biggest intraday decline since 2020. Not only that, but the shares of Home Depot Inc., Lowe’s Cos. and other building-related stocks dropped in sympathy. As one economist wrote in a note to clients, “Again, this feels much more like a 1.5% type growth rate economy and not 3.0%.”

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There’s little doubt consumer spending overall is slowing after the extraordinary surge during the pandemic era. But don’t confuse that with the idea pushed by the economic Cassandras that the consumer is finally cracking under a mountain of credit-card debt, high prices and elevated interest rates. The reality is more nuanced and reflects how consumer spending habits have shifted. Whereas the period of 2020-2022 was largely marked by spending on goods, whether it be backyard pools, appliances, cars or clothes, the period since has been marked by an increasing percentage of dollars spent on services. In other words, the things that make life enjoyable — travel, leisure, dining out and other experiences.

This shift was on full display Tuesday when Carnival Corp. raised its earnings forecast and said record-setting demand for cruises allowed it to raise prices for its packages. The company’s shares rose as much as 9.88% to their highest since early January. Carnival “sees no natural ending point” in demand, company executives said on a conference call with analysts.