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Meanwhile, 28% of holiday shoppers still have not paid off the gifts they purchased for their loved ones last year, according to another holiday spending report by NerdWallet . Major retailers tend to heavily discount some of their products as the holiday season unfolds. Heading into the peak holiday shopping season, there are a few steps you can take to help maximize your cash. "Slow shopping encourages consumers to think through each potential purchase rather than jumping on impulse," Woroch said. "This allows you to be mindful about what you're buying, why you're buying and who you're buying for while also giving you time to save up, compare prices and look for coupons," Woroch added.
Persons: they'll, Adam Davis, Davis, Sara Rathner, Sofia Baig, Gen, Andrea Woroch, Woroch Organizations: NerdWallet, National Retail Federation, U.S, Wells, Wells Fargo Retail Finance, Morning Locations: Wells Fargo, Novi , Michigan
About half, or 52%, of shoppers with incomes of $100,000 or more believe they can "easily afford" holiday expenses in 2024, according to Morning Consult, a survey research firm. To that point, 33% of those who earn $50,000 to $99,900 said they can afford holiday spending. Meanwhile, 18% of respondents who earn below $50,000 annually can sustain the costs, the report found. "Inflation is like a regressive tax," said Sofia Baig, economist at Morning Consult. "It hurts lower income people more than higher income people because it takes out a larger chunk of their wallet."
Persons: Roth, Sofia Baig Organizations: Finance, Morning Locations: U.S
With revenge travel over and pandemic savings depleted, travelers say they're planning fewer trips this summer, or skipping their vacations altogether. "After two straight years of strong gains, the number of Americans planning to take leisure trips is taking a dip," states a summer travel report from Deloitte Insights. 'Too expensive' to travel nowAmericans are planning 2.3 trips this summer, down from 3.1 trips from the summer of 2023, according to Deloitte's survey of more than 4,000 people. watch nowThe number of people who said they're avoiding summer travel altogether increased from 37% to 42%, the report showed. Those generations are spending less on airfare and hotel accommodations too, said Baig, suggesting a cutback in travel spending may be a normalization of the market following the end of revenge travel.
Persons: they're, Sofia Baig, Gen Zs, Baig, Zs Organizations: Deloitte, Marriott, Wyndham, Morning Locations: Hyatt, Airbnb
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe strong U.S. jobs market could become a concern for the Fed, economist saysSofia Baig, economist at Morning Consult, discusses the U.S. economy, cooling inflation and consumer spending.
Persons: Sofia Baig Organizations: Fed, Morning
The closely watched core PCE index — where volatile components of food and energy are excluded — unexpectedly ticked up: The Fed’s go-to gauge was up 4.7% for the year. In March, the core PCE gauge grew by 4.6%. Economists had forecast that core PCE would hold steady at 4.6%, according to Refinitiv. Consumer spending jumped 0.8% in April from March, double what economists had expected. Excluding the effects of inflation, real consumer spending increased 0.5%, reflecting a boost seen from new car purchases, according to the report.
But for consumers, the lengthy spell in the crossfire of persistently high prices and rising interest rates has taken its toll. Inflation-adjusted consumer spending was flat in March, marking the fourth time in five months that expenditures held steady or declined. “Further deterioration in the job market — the last remaining leg propping up the consumer — is bound to accelerate the downshift in consumer spending in the coming months. Private label growth is one of six indicators that Allison tracks to determine a consumer recession. “If you ask the economists, ‘Are we in a recession?’ they’re going to say ‘No, we’re not in a recession,’” he said.
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