Demand growth is cooling, but evidence suggests that overall fundamentals are still sound.
As the economic cycle matures, investors have increasingly become concerned that the US consumer may be starting to struggle. With consumption accounting for roughly two-thirds of economic activity, signs of stress among consumers could signal the start of an economic downturn, or even a recession.
Signs of Strain…and Changing Spending Patterns
We do see signs that consumers face more financial stress than they have over the past few years. After all, households have largely eroded their savings stockpiles from the pandemic. This naturally increases caution—something corporate America started sensing in the first quarter. It’s still early in the second-quarter earnings season, but the song remains the same: demand is cooling. From an average growth rate of 2.75% in 2023, real personal consumption is down to an annualized 1.9% so far in 2024.
As consumers shift gears in their buying behavior, we’re seeing more strength in spending on services and essentials than on goods, particularly the types of big-ticket goods with longer replacement cycles bought during the pandemic. Think furniture, appliances and grills. Based on personal consumption expenditure data, services spending is growing faster than goods spending, and is almost back to its pre-pandemic share of wallet levels.
Bargain Hunting: An Intensifying Search for Better Value
Shoppers are increasingly value oriented as they browse the shelves, forcing many companies to up their promotional discounts.
Quick-service restaurants are at the forefront of this trend: McDonald’s recently reported declining same-store sales, and is resorting to more discounts to spur restaurant traffic. After hiking prices to keep pace with labor costs, Chipotle highlighted higher price sensitivity in California that hurt business. Lamb Weston, one of the country’s largest french-fry manufacturers, echoed this notion—it called out an evolving operating backdrop driven partly by slower restaurant traffic.
So it seems clear that consumers are tapping the brakes and being more discerning about prices. But we see a theme of conservatism, not collapse—a story we think will continue.
Paychecks and Payments: Kicking the Tires on Fundamentals
Overall, consumer fundamentals remain strong. One way to gauge this is with a proxy for the household paycheck. We can create this by multiplying three data points together: the number of people working, the average number of hours worked per week and the average wage rate (Display). This indicator continues growing at a healthy clip and is outpacing inflation, which should support future consumption.