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Retail sales remain resilient

Retail sales remain resilient

Considering the slowing job market, we dove into retail sales data to search for signs of the direction of household spending. We analyzed existing-store sales and found that, despite the softening labor market and concerns about growth, aggregate consumer spending remains resilient.

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In the wake of the government shutdown, investors have been turning to alternate sources of data in the private domain. Last week, a private outplacement firm announced that October layoffs were higher than many anticipated, raising concerns that growth could slow. With that in mind, we dove into retail sales data to search for signs of a consumer slowdown; after all, consumption comprises 70% of gross domestic product (GDP), and a softening labor market could potentially subdue spending.  

We found that the consumer’s shopping habits remain resilient. Same store retail sales, which measure in-store sales for existing stores, grew 5.7% year over year in October — 2% above the historical average going back to 1997.

In our view, retail sales will continue to be an important barometer of consumer health. While there have been differences in spending by income cohort, thus far total spending has remained resilient, In addition, next year households will enjoy some relief when the Federal Reserve’s easing results in lower borrowing costs. They can also expect stimulus of an estimated $160 billion in additional tax refunds compared to 2025. We believe consumption should continue to support positive economic growth this year and next.

VERWANDTE THEMEN
Job market hanging in there
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Recent jobless claims data point to a resilient U.S. labor market, with both initial and continuing claims remaining low and signaling that unemployment is still contained. Although job growth has softened and remains subdued, March’s job growth of 178,000, the highest since 2024, is encouraging. Our constructive outlook still holds despite continued uncertainty related to the war in the Middle East.

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Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Markets are reacting to the Middle East conflict with sharp moves across asset classes, signaling broad risk repricing and shifting safe haven behavior. While volatility is elevated, fundamentals like earnings growth continue to support our constructive outlook.

Signals from spreads
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Credit spreads have risen yet remain historically low, reinforcing our view that the oil shock is likely temporary — not a driver of long-term growth concerns.

Dollar strength: what does it mean for markets?
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Geopolitical tensions have lifted oil prices, sent U.S. stocks slightly lower and driven flows into the safety of the U.S. dollar, which has strengthened versus peers. While a weaker dollar previously supported international equity outperformance, dollar stabilization now suggests that tailwind is fading, underscoring the importance of diversification across regions and asset classes.

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