Reopening stocks at risk of consumer spending slowing down

Where did all that stimmy go? First to trading accounts, and now to bars, restaurants and of course, more AMC stock.
Reopening stocks: News broke yesterday that American retail sales fell 1.3% in May after rising 4.7% in March and 0.9% in April. While spending has likely shifted from retail to restaurants, travel and services – many are wondering – how long will the government stimulus-driven rebound last?
Once the pandemic hit, consumer spending fell off a cliff. But after spending soared in March, many thought it would continue to surge all summer due to:
They weren’t wrong. People are spending more on services (ie. bars, restaurants, and much-needed haircuts) – but it’s been offset by less spending on goods. A large part of this is the decline in spending on cars, which have jumped in price due to the semiconductor shortage.
According to David Rosenberg, former Chief Economist of Merrill Lynch, the spending boom might be over a lot sooner than anticipated:
Looking to the East, China was months ahead of the US in reopening the economy. Despite a strong initial rebound, China’s retail sales slowed significantly in recent months – with economists blaming it on weak income growth.
Not apples to oranges comparison: Chinese consumers haven’t received as much stimulus as the US but what we can takeaway is that the surge in extra spending won’t last forever.
Over two dozen actively managed funds climbed over 20% this year, with the best performers investing in so-called reopening stocks – companies benefiting from a reopened economy (i.e. financial, retail, oil stocks etc). But stocks are forward-looking – i.e. current prices reflect future expectations – and times are changing…
Contrarian move: Finding value in tech stocks again and Chinese stocks