With inflation threatening to weigh on consumer demand, particularly among low-to-middle-income consumers, Macy’s says more shoppers could be faced with a consequential choice: Head to the mall or take a summer vacation. “The biggest challenge that we’ve had in terms of thinking about managing through the beginning of 2022, is where is the demand going to come from,” Macy’s Chief Financial Officer Adrian Mitchell said during a presentation at J.P. Morgan’s annual Retail Round-Up event. “We do believe the demand is out there,” he said. “We do believe that the consumer is going to be spending. But are they going to be spending on discretionary items that we sell, or are they going to be spending on an airline ticket to Florida, or travel, or going out to restaurants more?” The department store chain is far from alone in navigating this tricky dynamic, with some signs of a recession emerging. Economists at Deutsche Bank said this week that persistent inflation combined with regular interest rate hikes will likely push the US into recession in 2023. The bond market also recently flashed a classic recession indicator, in which the 2-year Treasury yield rose above the 10-year note. Those pressures are spurring expectations that some Americans, especially those in lower-wage jobs, will be forced to choose between, say, a long-awaited vacation or concert ticket over a new swimsuit or handbag. Some early inflation trade-offs are already taking place, according to one report. Consumers are spending 59% more, on average, at gas and convenience stores than they were a year earlier, based on the latest data in Numerator’s Shopping Behavior Index. The increases are most pronounced for low-and-middle-income tiers, according to the report. In turn, discretionary categories including home improvement and beauty are seeing the biggest declines, week by week, in unit sales across income levels, Numerator found. Levi Strauss & Co. CEO Chip Bergh told CNBC that the denim retailer has yet to notice consumers opt for less expensive goods amid inflationary pressures, and that demand has remained robust. But Bergh added that some consumers have just started to dip into their savings accounts for extra cash — a trend Levi is monitoring closely. “We don’t have our head in the sand,” he said. Levi was confident enough about its current business to reiterate its full-year outlook, while Macy’s has yet to adjust the 2022 financial forecast in February when it called for sales to be flat to up 1% compared with the year-earlier period. Macy’s said that it has recently tracked a cooling off in demand for certain home goods and casual apparel relative to the peak of the pandemic. On the plus side, it said weddings are quickly picking up, which would drive up sales of dresses, cosmetics and men’s tailored clothing. Still, Mitchell stressed that Macy’s remains cautious. “Even though the consumer is healthy, we do see that inflation is elevated more so than what we expected coming into the year,” he said. “And we also recognise that the supply chain disruptions are not solved.” Nordstrom, which also attended the J.P. Morgan retail event this week, noted that its typically affluent customer base doesn’t tend to spend more or less amid gas price volatility. The health of the stock market tends to correlate more closely with the performance of its business, said CEO Erik Nordstrom.
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