Bank of America credit card data is a warning about the consumer

News

Bank of America has published its latest credit card spending data and the is some concerning news. Card spending per household fell 1.5% m/m in March.

They note that spending was particularly weak in gasoline, furniture, home improvement and department stores. With that, they see a 0.5% decline in the retail sales control group in Friday’s report. Compare that with the -0.3% consensus estimate.

Is this a sign of a looming consumer slowdown? Maybe not.

“In our view, the slowdown In Federal tax refunds In March, as reported by
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), contributed to the weakness in
spending,” BAC writes. “The IRS Issued $84bn of refunds this March, which is $25bn less than the refunds issued in March 2022.”

In addition, supplemental food stamp benefits expired in March.

Bank of America forecasts that a recession will begin in the third quarter of this year.

Summary:

  • Slowdown in federal tax refunds in March led to weak spending
  • IRS issued $25bn less in refunds compared to March 2022
  • Average refund size 10% smaller, unlikely to catch up to 2022 levels
  • Expiring SNAP benefits may have affected spending
  • No clear evidence of regional bank stress impacting spending
  • 1Q 2023 retail ex-auto spending growth: 5.2% quarter-over-quarter annualized
    Weak hand-off for 2Q growth, raising risk of contraction
  • Base case: recession starting in 3Q 2023

See the note here

Articles You May Like

Dallas Fed trimmed mean November PCE price index +1.8% vs +2.9%
Market Chaos Unfolds Despite Widely Expected Fed Hawkish Cut
Santa Claus stuffs stock market portfolios in a holiday-shortened session
Market Recap: U.S. stock indices rise today, but close with weekly losses
Chinese stocks set for its first win in four years

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *