Wall Street Is Skeptical That Shoppers Can Keep Spending in 2024

Analysts are growing increasingly doubtful that US consumer spending will hold up into next year, even as American shoppers continue to be surprisingly resilient despite lingering inflation and elevated borrowing costs.

Over the past 12 weeks, sell-side analysts have trimmed profit projections for the S&P 500 consumer discretionary sector through the third quarter of next year, according to Bloomberg Intelligence equity strategists Gina Martin Adams and Michael Casper. The cuts, which were primarily driven by slumping revenue estimates, were enough to push the expected pace of consumer discretionary earnings growth below the S&P 500 Index’s anticipated pace of earnings growth before the middle of 2024.

“While margin forecasts have held up well, revenue estimates are tumbling as the consensus doubts discretionary demand in the year ahead,” they wrote in a note to clients on Thursday.

The S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary Index has soared 40% this year, almost twice the S&P 500’s 23% gain, though technology heavyweights Tesla Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. have powered much of the advance. Carnival Corp. and Nike Inc. will offer the latest read on consumer demand when they report earnings next week.

Consumer Discretionary Stocks Trounce S&P 500