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'Barbie,' consumer spending, jobs, retail shrink: What we learned this week

In This Article:

It was a busy week for investors, with earnings and jobs data dominating the headlines. Here some of Yahoo Finance Live's top takeaways.

Lower income households are feeling recessionary, as recent earnings reports from retailers like Walmart (WMT), Target (TGT), Home Depot (HD), and Lowe’s (LOW) show a cautious consumer, as they pull back on big-ticket spending and shift to spending on services versus goods. Yahoo Finance’s Brad Smith notes "consumers are continuing to be extremely judicious" about where they’re purchasing items.

The July JOLTS report showed that the number of job openings slipped to 8.8 million in July, which fell short of the expected 9.5 million.

Companies such as Dollar General (DG), Five Below (FIVE), and Nordstrom (JWN), all said they are feeling the impact of shrink hitting their bottom lines.

Barbie, Beyoncé’s ‘Renaissance World Tour,’ and Taylor Swift ‘Eras Tour’ have had quite the impact on the economy, as they benefit from the consumer shift in spending on services over goods.

Video Transcript

RACHELLE AKUFFO: Well, speaking of things being busy, a busy week for corporate earnings and economic data. As we enter the first trading day of September, let's recap some of the biggest lessons that we learned this week.

First up, lower income households are feeling recessionary. I mean, we're seeing people really pulling back more than ever. We heard in the earnings calls. We know that people are really bracing for what we're seeing with student loan repayments set to start back up. And so I think every little seed that's being planted, is saying, look the consumer has run out of that pandemic money, they're trading down or trading off some of these more expensive things.

And then when you factor in, when you look at those big gas prices on top of everything else, it's just-- it's a very tough time for the consumer right now. And it's starting to show up in some of the price action.

BRAD SMITH: One of the acknowledgments from BlackRock, the lower income parts of the economy are certainly feeling a little bit more of the pressure, especially considering the extent to which inflation has needed to be combated to this point. And particularly, BlackRock's Rick Rieder who had said off the back of Fed Chair Jay Powell's commentary even-- and Jackson Hole recently saying that the higher rates right now is an overly regressive tax on lower income households and consequently expands the income and wealth gap in the country here.

And if there's anything that you've looked across, many of the details that have come forward over the course of this retail earnings season is that consumers are continuing to be extremely judicious about where they're purchasing big ticket appliances, where they're purchasing televisions even, or even the types of clothes or apparel that they are buying. And so that particularly is of note and could spell out a little bit more of how consumers across income levels are thinking about their spends, even amid this shift to services spending as well, which we'll get to in a hot second.