Retail Stocks Need Unlikely Holiday Miracle to Save Rough 2025

Retail Stocks Need Unlikely Holiday Miracle to Save Rough 2025

Retail Stocks Need Unlikely Holiday Miracle to Save Rough 2025

<p>Shoppers in San Francisco, California.</p>

Shoppers in San Francisco, California.

The American consumer is limping into the holiday season.

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That was the upshot from a week of big-box retailer earnings that came with signs of caution among shoppers increasingly worried about a softening job market and persistent inflation.

A rally Friday saved Target Corp. shares from the worst week since April after its earnings showed the retailer cut prices at the expense of profits, with customers pulling back from nonessentials like apparel and home goods. Home Depot Inc. dropped more than 5% in the five days, the most since March, after lowering its outlook as strapped homeowners hold off on big-ticket purchases.

Even Walmart Inc., the belle of the retailer ball with huge profits and a rosy forecast, sent an economic warning of sorts. Its shares rallied in the week, but the growth it reported came largely from groceries and mid-tier customers looking for bargains — both signs of skittishness among consumers.

This week’s results, which also included reports from Gap Inc., Ross Stores Inc. and TJX Cos., showed that a growing number of consumers are questioning discretionary purchases while trading down for essentials to stretch every dollar. More worryingly, wealthier Americans who have powered the economy for most of the year are becoming cost-conscious. The mood was captured by University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment gauge, which fell to near the lowest on record this month.

“Consumers remain frustrated about the persistence of high prices and weakening incomes,” the report said.

That’s bad news for an economy driven by consumer spending, especially as persistent inflation may keep the Federal Reserve from cutting rates even as the labor market shows signs of weakness.

“Affordability is a major issue during the pivotal holiday stretch that matters most for earnings growth,” said Timothy Chubb, chief investment officer at Girard, a Univest Wealth Division. “I worry that Corporate America’s revenue growth will slow from here and margins will get squeezed as consumer sentiment sours and the economy and labor market soften even further as companies pass on price increases to cash-strapped shoppers.”

Retailer stocks have been trailing the broader market for several years, especially as AI euphoria sent investor dollars pouring into tech and related bets. But the dynamic is worsening in 2025 as lower-end consumers get squeezed by inflation and the job market.

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