Holiday Outlooks Due From Retailers in Test of US Consumer

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) -- Last week’s selloff, which comes on the heels of what has been a generally successful earnings season for Corporate America, has investors bracing for one final test: a reading on the state of the consumer from a series of retail bellwethers who report in the coming days.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Not only will the retailers provide projections for the key holiday shopping season, they will likely face new questions about the impact of President-elect Donald Trump’s proposed tariffs plans. Walmart Inc. is set to report on Tuesday, followed by Target Corp., TJ Maxx owner TJX Cos. and a slew of other retailers.

Their outlooks will be critical for investors, given consumer spending powers two-thirds of the US economy and the current quarter is typically the strongest time of the year for retailers. A negative surprise may take a toll on the broader equity rally, which has pushed the S&P 500 to 51 records this year, the most recent coming last week in the wake of Trump’s election victory.

“It has a big impact on investor sentiment, whether these companies are able to continue to show a consumer that’s in good health,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors for the US SPDR ETF business. “I think that consumers will likely continue to surprise on the upside. And I think that data will likely continue to be a bullish sign for the rally.”

Holiday Spending

To be sure, retailers will have to share the spotlight with Nvidia Corp. on Wednesday, as the chipmaker will post quarterly results after the market closes. Otherwise, it’s the group’s holiday outlooks that will be top of mind for investors.

While sales during the traditionally high season for retailers are expected to grow on a year-over-year basis, they will likely do so at the slowest pace since 2018, according to a Bloomberg Intelligence analysis of industry forecasts. Retailers also have less time to capture consumer spending, with five fewer shopping days between Thanksgiving and Christmas this year than in 2023.

To Arone, retailers will likely take a conservative approach in setting expectations for the fourth quarter, with consumers stretched amid still stubborn inflation. But he also wouldn’t be surprised to then see companies beat those muted forecasts, he said.