Hartford Courant

COVID-19 surge puts dent in spending, travel recovery

- By Damian J. Troise

A COVID-19 resurgence this summer has caused consumers to turn cautious, while investors trim their investment­s in a travel sector still struggling to recover.

Retail sales dipped 1.1% in July as consumers spent less on clothing, furniture and sporting goods. At the same time investors have been retreating from cruise lines, airlines and other travelrela­ted stocks as those companies face another potential stall in activity as cases of COVID-19 surged because of the highly contagious delta variant.

The pullback in spending and investment­s in the travel sector mark an unwelcome reversal from growth through much of the year. Vaccinatio­ns seemed to be knocking down the virus, giving people more freedom to shop at stores, eat out and plan trips after more than a year of hunkering down at home.

“Clearly as we learned over the course of the last 18 months this thing takes twists and turns that are undefinabl­e,” said Mike Stritch, chief investment officer of BMO Wealth Management.

Some of the pullback in consumer spending on goods was expected as people increased spending on services. The services sector, including restaurant­s, started to bounce back with growth accelerati­ng to a record pace in July, according to The Institute for Supply Management.

Analysts don’t expect another series of lockdowns, but people could start to cut their trips to restaurant­s and other public spaces.

“Our sentiment indicators are starting to flash from bright yellow to red,” Stritch said. “That gives a pause, potentiall­y, in the short run.”

Concerns have been rising on Wall Street as analysts and investors tracked the rise in virus cases. The resurgence was strong enough that at the end of July the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommende­d that even vaccinated people resume wearing masks indoors in public places.

Several airlines have warned that the virus surge could ground their recoveries.

Southwest Airlines no longer expects to be profitable in the third quarter, after recovering enough to post a profit during the second quarter. Spirit Airlines has said that a service meltdown that started in late July and a rise in COVID-19 cases are causing more last-minute cancellati­ons.

Major retailers have not yet signaled concerns over the resurgent virus keeping shoppers at home. Both Walmart and Target have given investors an upbeat forecast for the remainder of the year. Investors are signaling more caution however.

The S&P 500’s consumer discretion­ary sector, which includes clothing companies and other retailers that rely on discretion­ary spending and in-person services, is down nearly 1.5% in August after gaining 0.5% in July. The sector rose just under 3.8% in June.

 ?? AP ?? A virus surge has made passengers more cautious as the travel sector recovers.
AP A virus surge has made passengers more cautious as the travel sector recovers.

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