US firms confront widening income gulf as wealthy spend, budget shoppers struggle
BY Reuters | ECONOMIC | 12:37 PM EST*
Premium brands thrive as affluent consumers spend freely
*
Value-focused firms face spending pullback from budget shoppers
*
K-shaped recovery highlights income disparity in US consumer spending
By Shivansh Tiwary and Juveria Tabassum
Feb 11 (Reuters) - America's consumer economy is pulling in opposite directions, a gulf increasingly apparent in C-suite commentary, with premium brands profiting from well-off customers while value-focused firms battle restraint from cash-strapped households.
Companies ranging from Ralph Lauren
Meanwhile, PepsiCo
The dynamic reflects a ?deepening K-shaped recovery in the United States, with spending power concentrated at the top, and C-suites are keen on capturing that wealthier consumer.
The highest-earning ?10% of households now account for nearly half of all U.S. consumer spending, according to a Moody's Analytics ?report based on federal data.
About 30 ?years ago, those earners were just over one-third of U.S. consumer spending.
Some are concerned that middle-income consumers are starting to fall behind as well. "Middle-income households' wage growth appears to have softened, even ?as higher-income gains remain resilient," Bank of America analysts said.
Behind the split is ?a familiar arithmetic. Inflation has hit lower-income households harder because they devote a bigger share of their budgets to necessities such as food, gasoline and rent, leaving less room for discretionary purchases and little buffer for unexpected expenses.
The University of Michigan's Consumer ?Sentiment Index increased to 57.3 in February, the highest reading since last August. ?Still, the index ?remained about 20% below its January 2025 level.
"Sentiment surged for consumers with the largest stock portfolios, while it stagnated and remained at dismal levels for consumers without stock holdings," said Joanne Hsu, the director of the Surveys of Consumers.
COMPANIES SHIFTING FOCUS
U.S. airlines are a ?prime example of an industry where the big players are shifting their profit engines toward the front of the plane, by leaning on ?corporate travel, loyalty programs and perks like lie-flat seats and champagne.
"The strength in the consumer sector is at the higher end of the curve," Delta Air CEO Ed Bastian said. "The lower-end consumer is struggling. We fortunately do not live there."
Companies that serve the mass market are pulling out all stops to defend market share.
"Consumer sentiment has worsened, industry trends have
softened and there is increasing volatility in geopolitical
landscape," Kraft Heinz
PepsiCo
"We've spent the past year listening closely to consumers, and they've told us they're feeling the strain," Rachel Ferdinando, ?PepsiCo Foods U.S. CEO told Reuters.
Newell Brands
Peterson and hotel operator Marriott's
"The gap in spending between the well-to-do (the top 20%) and lower- and middle-income households has never been wider, and it continues to increase," said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics.
WAGE GROWTH DISPARITY
Bank of America's January deposit data showed after-tax wage and salary growth lagging for both lower- ?and middle-income households, rising just 0.9% and 1.6% year over year, respectively, versus 3.7% for higher-income households.
"While the sizeable gap between lower- and higher-income wage growth isn't widening further, it also isn't shrinking - which helps explain why lower-income spending growth continues to lag," BofA analysts wrote in a note.
American Express
(Reporting by Shivansh Tiwary, Juveria Tabassum ?and Manya Saini in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)
Print
