US Retail Spending (And the Economy) Is Hanging Off The Edge of a Cliff

The state of the US economy is like a fine piece of art — experts say it’s good, but from a consumer’s POV, you really have no idea what you’re looking at. Several major banks, including JPMorgan, have recently raised their outlook on the US economy — even dropping their 2023 recession forecasts.
Everything is fine, right? …Right?
In the second quarter, four of the five largest US retailers beat Wall Street expectations — the outlier being Target (NYSE:TGT) — which saw sales fall the most in nearly seven years.
But further down the chain, several retailers that reported earnings this week have warned about deteriorating conditions:
Discount retailers have reported better-than-expected earnings in a sign that shoppers are bargain-hunting. However, high living costs continue to erode purchasing power despite a relatively strong job market.
Troubling data: In the second quarter, new US credit card delinquencies jumped to 7.2% — up from 6.5% in the first quarter and higher than their pre-COVID rate.
While this is still far below the near 14% levels seen during the 2008 financial crisis — the trend is worrying as rating agency Moody’s warned that this number could continue “rising materially.”
Forward-looking: At this point, consumer spending could go either way. And the real test comes in September and October — once school shopping is done and student loan payments restart.