According to the Conference Board survey, the percentage of consumers planning a vacation (38.7%) has dropped to its lowest level in over 45 years, outside of periods during or immediately after a recession. This sharp decline in discretionary service spending is a significant red flag for the domestic travel and tourism industry.

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Anecdotal evidence suggests even affluent consumers are pulling back on spending, despite a strong stock market. This may be driven by concerns over the weakening job market, as even well-to-do parents worry about their adult children's employment prospects, creating caution across the family unit.

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.

The ratio of leading-to-coincident economic indicators is at historic lows seen only in deep recessions (1982, 2009). However, this may be skewed by the leading indicators' reliance on extremely negative consumer sentiment surveys. This divergence suggests we might be at the bottom of a cycle, not the beginning of a downturn.

The sharp drop in the fiscal impulse represents a direct, dollar-for-dollar hit to nominal GDP that has already occurred. This indicates a recession is underway, not forthcoming. The National Bureau of Economic Analysis (NBER) will likely backdate the start of this recession to the third quarter of 2025.

During the 2008 recession, Eurostar found overworked consumers valued short, restorative breaks over long holidays. They successfully marketed travel not as a discretionary spend but as an essential way to "reconnect" and "recharge," leading to a record year despite the economic climate.

The podcast's economists assess the probability of a recession in the next year at 40-45%, significantly higher than the consensus view of 25-30%. This heightened risk is based on deteriorating labor market trends and is corroborated by Moody's own machine learning models.

The University of Michigan's "Current Conditions Index" has fallen to its lowest point since 1978, indicating extreme dissatisfaction with the present economy. This pessimism is deeper than during the Great Recession, even as consumers maintain some hope for improvement in the next six months.

Real consumer spending is up only 1% year-to-date (non-annualized), which annualizes to a weak 1.5%. This is a significant slowdown from the typical 2-2.5% growth in previous years, indicating that consumers are substantially pulling back their expenditures.

Consumer spending patterns in the gaming sector act as a canary in the coal mine for the economy. When consumers feel financial pressure, the first cutback is on destination travel like Las Vegas. A more severe warning sign of a pervasive downturn would be a subsequent decline in spending at local, regional casinos.

While headline forecasts predict a 3.5% rise in holiday sales, this is nearly entirely offset by inflation, which is running close to 3%. In real terms, consumer spending will be flat at best, meaning the average family's standard of living is declining this holiday season.