How’s the U.S. consumer doing?
Deloitte published its "State of the US consumer" report for July
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Accounting giant Deloitte last week published its “State of the US Consumer” report for July, giving an up-to-date look at consumer financial health.
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Findings are based on a monthly survey of 1,000 consumers nationwide.
Why it matters: Consumer financial health impacts businesses across all industries, including HVAC.
Highlights: Overall consumer spending hasn’t moved much this year, up only 0.3% since year-end 2023.
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Consumers’ intentions to spend in discretionary categories (i.e. travel) rose in July but remain below 2021 levels.
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Meanwhile, non-discretionary spending intentions (i.e. housing) have surpassed 2021 levels.
Synchrony CEO Brian Doubles echoed the spending trend on a recent call, noting that lower-income consumers are “rotating into non-discretionary categories.”
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Purchase volume in its “Home & Auto” segment, which includes HVAC, also dropped by 3% year-over-year.
Of note: “Since September 2022, the percentage of higher-income respondents that say their financial situations improved over the past year increased to 74%,” the report says.
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“However, sentiment remained significantly lower and relatively unchanged among middle- and lower-income respondents,” it adds.
Yes, but: Consumer confidence inched up in July, driven by a more positive future outlook.
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“Compared to last month, consumers were somewhat less pessimistic about the future. Expectations for future income improved slightly,” said economist Dana Peterson.
The bottom line: Despite the ebbs and flows, “financial and spending sentiment show signs of optimism,” Deloitte said.
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