Truth be told, headlines are a poor planning tool for anything. Even the major news organizations don’t get it right, certainly not all the time. They quote famous names, sell their product, and all too often emotions are formed, impressions develop, and decisions are made. What follows is a concise list of headline news from a period most will never forget.
These headlines are from credible sources and quote credible people, but they are not looking at leading indicators and consumer trends and the host of other factors we look at every day at ITR Economics.
As we write this, the S&P 500 is officially back in bear territory. The market has been volatile, and S&P 500 decline makes people fear the future because of a perceived “wealth effect.”
The following is ITR Economics’ mid-June analysis. We do not have a snappy headline about hurricanes. Perhaps our headline would be "It’s Too Late to Get Out Now," or "You don’t have to Rise and Decline With the Overall Market."
That would be tough to prove based on data; however, it is often propagated as a truth, so people perceive it as a truth. According to the US Energy Information Administration and the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the ratio of gasoline expenditures to after-tax income in the US averaged 2.6% in the first quarter of 2022. The chart shows that we have certainly seen that ratio higher, and lower, in the past. The swing in the ratio is not consistently associated with good times or bad and is not well-correlated to the trend in retail sales (adjusted for inflation).
Our analysis shows that higher gasoline and diesel prices do not choke off retail sales. In fact, retail sales can keep moving higher at a steady pace even as gasoline prices move higher. That sounds counterintuitive, but it is reality. We complain about the price at the pump, but history shows that today’s prices are not likely to bring on a consumer-led recession.