With our pulse on the Street and ongoing client dialogues, there seems to be an inflection at play. Yes, uncertainty remains and not all sectors are popping at the same time, but the tone of 2024 is palatably more optimistic than 2023… there’s a different level of energy. Amid conservative guides, the table is being set for another under promise, over deliver year. We seem to be gearing up for stabilization followed by acceleration… the proverbial hockey stick, which was the narrative last year this time.
We analyzed annual revenue and EPS guidance provided by calendar-year U.S. Consumer Discretionary companies with market caps greater than $1B that have reported to date.1
For comparison purposes, we provide an “All-Company” benchmark, which tracks in real-time2 all companies larger than $1B in market cap across all sectors that have reported to date.
Calendar-Year Guidance Breakdown by Industry
We analyzed the earnings calls for this group and the broader Consumer Discretionary universe to identify key themes.
Similar to commentary we observed in our Big U.S. Banks Sector Beat, management teams continue to see consumer spending normalizing, but overall better than feared as some investors and corporate executives had been bracing for recession risk in early 2024. While a broad recession has not manifested to date and U.S. consumers are seen as more resilient than expected (i.e., they are spending more), their long-time health is a question mark (i.e., an increasing number are spending above their means). Further, evidence that the consumer is a tale of two [income] cities continues to mount.
Over the past month alone, we have seen:
Continuing, there remains bifurcation in consumer purchasing trends and outlooks. For example, consumer companies selling highly discretionary, larger-ticket items (e.g., boats, tractors, off-road vehicles) were less constructive on the Q4 environment and their outlooks compared with companies generating revenue from more routine consumer purchases, where people can more easily shift to value-conscious consumption (e.g., beauty supplies).
While the U.S. consumer is holding up, the other primary area of consumer weakness on a global scale is China. Many executives raised warning flags this quarter over weakening conditions amid a property crisis and high youth unemployment levels. While these concerns are not surprising given three consecutive quarters of more investors anticipating worsening economic conditions over the next six months, the lingering unknown is how long this weakness will persist through 2024.
According to our latest Inside The Buy-Side® Earnings Primer® published on January 11, at the start of earnings season, we saw the level of investor bullishness toward Consumer Discretionary companies bounce off the record low observed last quarter. Interestingly, this resulted in the sector holding the distinction as being the largest bull-sentiment gainer in Q4, while simultaneously registering second only to REITs as the sector with the most downbeat views overall (and with virtually no slippage of those taking the bearish case). Moreover, 37% expected improving consumer confidence over the next six months, a stark contrast from just 8% in our Q3 survey. The net effect of these results demonstrates that more investors are finding reasons to become constructive on the consumer than they were last year as recession concerns fade to the background for now
Key Earnings Call Themes
Executives Express Caution Amid “Mixed Signals” and Expectations for a Gradual Slowdown, Though Many are Optimistic the Environment Will Improve by the End of 2024
Spending Outlooks Differ Across the Sector, though Many Point to “Consistent” Consumer Demand Thus Far; “They are Still Coming in and They are Still Shopping… They are Just Very Frugal”
Priorities Shift to Organic Investment with Openness towards Opportunistic M&A
Pricing Power Ebbs as Companies Prioritize Cost Savings and “Educated” Pricing Strategies to Navigate Market Challenges and Enhance Long-term Competitiveness in 2024
Pricing
Productivity & Cost Savings
Companies Trade Off Larger Wage Costs for Lower Employee Turnover
Many Point to Weakening Consumer Conditions, though Others Expect Traction in 2024; Further, with a U.S. Presidential Election Looming, Executives Weigh in on the Tariff Environment
Demand
Tariffs
The better-than-expected U.S. GDP, consumer confidence, and spending in various areas certainly point to a more buoyant U.S. consumer, but on the flipside is the burden of record credit card debt and borrowings – the current concern about which can best to described as a bombastic shoulder shrug. Much hinges on the consistently strong employment environment, though we continue to see increased layoffs as companies manage profitability in a slowing growth environment and as pricing power has now hit the wall.
The anticipation is ripe…what will be in store in 2024? In an election year with the promise of rate cuts… the resilient consumer will soar! We will continue to monitor these trends and more as we work through the quarter, and hope you find our research timely and insightful.
In case you missed it, you can access the link below for a replay of our Inside The Buy-Side® Earnings Primer® webinar The Big So What™ – Q4’23 Earnings Season. Thank you to all who attended the session live and submitted questions!