How US consumers can be smart shoppers during high inflation

US retail sales data outpaced March estimates, growing by 0.7% month over month. But while American consumers appear unfazed by inflation and higher-for-longer interest rates for now, what are some strategies to help them save more as they continue to spend?

Host of the Future Rich Podcast Barbara Ginty, CFP joins Wealth's Brad Smith to talk about the categories Americans are spending the most money on, such as housing and cars as prices rise.

"Obviously the reports are showing that we're still spending. So I think this is the time to be cautious and reevaluate your budget and take into account inflation, which we still have out there," Ginty tells Yahoo Finance. "So your dollars are not going as far or lasting as long as they used to be. and so it's, I think, a good time to be cautious about overuse of credit card and the new phenomenon of 'buy now pay, later,' — which is always at a point of sale, and I don't think that's meant to be a point-of-sale decision."

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This post was written by Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

- Well, the consumer remains resilient to retail sales topping Wall Street expectations, continuing its upward trend by rising 7/10 of a percent in March compared to 4/10 of a percent that was expected. But inflated prices are still impacting the cautious consumer and their household budgets. So how can you be a smart shopper in times of sticky inflation?

Let's bring in Barbara Ginty who is the host of Future Rich Podcast. Barbara, great to have you here with us today. Let's turn this from potential wealth into kinetic wealth for a lot of folks out there who are trying to figure out how they can be smart shoppers. Where are the areas that we saw within this retail sales report that show that there are still deals to be made out there?

BARBARA GINTY: I think that the average consumer, right now, is stretched pretty thin, but obviously, the reports are showing that we're still spending. So I think this is the time to be cautious and reevaluate your budget and take into account inflation, which we still have out there.

So your dollars are not going as far or lasting as long as they used to be. And I think a good time to be cautious about overuse of credit card and also the new phenomenon of buy now, pay later, which is always at a point-of-sale, and I don't think that's meant to be a point-of-sale decision.

- That's interesting. And the way that consumers are spending, I mean, we repeatedly get even more information about where consumers are leveraging cash versus just swiping or tapping to pay. I wonder what you make of that.