The underperformance of some consumer discretionary stocks is directly linked to financial pressure on lower-income and younger households. Meanwhile, sectors exposed to more resilient high-income consumers have held up better. A broader consumer recovery, spurred by tariff relief or cooling inflation, is needed to improve returns in these lagging market segments.
Spirit's troubles highlight a broader market trend where budget-conscious consumers cut back while the wealthy splurge on luxury. This pattern, once confined to goods, is now evident in services like travel, signaling a potential risk for other budget-focused businesses and an opportunity for luxury brands.
Consumer spending resilience is not broad-based. It's largely driven by the top 10% of income earners (making over $275k), who now account for almost 50% of total spending. This is the only cohort whose spending has outpaced inflation since the pandemic, making the wider economy highly sensitive to their behavior.
Aggregate economic data looks positive because the top 10% of households drive consumption. However, the bottom 90% are experiencing financial distress, which is reflected in negative consumer sentiment. The 'average' consumer experience doesn't exist, leading to a disconnect between official statistics and public perception.
While high-income spending remains stable, the next wave of consumption growth will stem from a recovery in the middle-income segment. This rebound will be driven by stabilizing factors like reduced policy uncertainty and neutral monetary policy, not a major labor market acceleration.
Despite the best earnings season in four years for companies like Apple and Amazon, consumer brands like Chipotle, Shake Shack, and Crocs report slowing sales from 20-somethings. This demographic faces soaring unemployment and slowing wage growth, creating a hidden weak spot in an otherwise strong economy.
While many households struggle, data showing a 9% year-over-year growth in OpenTable seated diner reservations points to a resilient, high-spending consumer segment. This divergence in spending habits is a key real-time indicator of a "K-shaped" economy, where the affluent are far less affected by broader economic pressures.
Despite headline economic growth, the bottom 80% of U.S. households have seen their spending power stagnate since before the pandemic. Their spending has grown at exactly the rate of inflation, meaning their real consumption hasn't increased. This data explains the widespread public dissatisfaction with the economy.
Navy Federal's data reveals that middle-class spending on the low-cost e-commerce site TEMU has "nosedived." This shift away from even the cheapest online options indicates that this demographic has exhausted its excess savings and is now under significant financial pressure, forcing them to consolidate spending at retailers like Walmart and Costco.
While AI drove 2025 CapEx, a broader business investment recovery depends on a cyclical upswing in demand. This requires consumer spending to broaden beyond the wealthy, directly linking corporate investment growth to the improved financial health and real income growth of low- and middle-income households.
Aggregate US consumer strength is misleadingly propped up by the top 40% of upper-income households, whose spending is buoyed by appreciating assets. This masks weaknesses among lower- and middle-income groups who are more affected by inflation, creating a narrowly driven economic expansion.