San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

WHAT ALL THE SINGLE LADIES (AND MEN) SAY ABOUT THE U.S. ECONOMY

- BY JEANNA SMIALEK & JASON KARAIAN Smialek and Karaian write for The New York Times.

Aftershock­s from the coronaviru­s pandemic continue to rumble across the U.S. economy, and Signet Jewelers shared a surprising one this week: The company is selling fewer engagement rings this year because, it said, singles who were stuck at home during lockdowns failed to meet their would-be fiances in 2020.

“As we predicted, there were fewer engagement­s in the quarter resulting from COVID’S disruption of dating three years ago,” Virginia C. Drosos, CEO at Signet, which owns Kay Jewelers and Zales, told investors Thursday. Shares of Signet, the largest jewelry retailer in the United States, tumbled after the company cut its forecasts for sales and profit for the rest of the year.

In a way, the engagement ring has become a sparkly microcosm of the U.S. economy. The bridal jewelry business is being buffeted by the delayed effects of the pandemic, rapid inflation that is squeezing consumers and a growing sense of nervousnes­s among shoppers.

Some of the volatility is owed purely to the pandemic. Weddings were canceled in droves during 2020 lockdowns, but bounced back starting in late 2021 and throughout 2022, and were expected to level off over the coming years as more typical patterns returned. Wedding-related activity does appear to show some early signs of slowing in 2023 — but it is unclear whether that’s the result of a 2020 dating dry spell, per Signet, or simply a return to the longstandi­ng shift toward later and fewer marriages.

What is clear? Wedding trends are also tied to broader, and potentiall­y longer-lasting, economic forces. Signet may be selling less because fewer people are getting down on one knee, but also because ring shoppers are becoming more cautious and spending less amid rapid inf lation and rising uncertaint­y about the direction of the economy. Both the volume and value of jewelry sold by Signet last quarter declined.

Drosos said that the company had “expected the low-double-digit decline in engagement­s that we saw this quarter,” but that other factors were also at play. “Recent consumer confidence, lower tax refunds, economic concerns triggered by regional bank failures and continued inflation led to a weakening trend in spending across the jewelry industry,” she added.

Consumers are contending with big challenges this year. Prices have climbed about 15 percent cumulative­ly over the past three years, as measured by the personal consumptio­n expenditur­es index. Inflation has slowed in recent months, but many workers are finding that their wages are falling behind.

The Federal Reserve has been raising interest rates to try to cool the economy and fight the stubborn price increases. Besides making it more expensive for consumers to shop on credit or take out loans, the rate moves have increased the chance that the economy might tip into a recession.

As many households watch their savings dwindle and worry about their job security, they may be less willing to spend on big-ticket items such as fancy diamond rings and bespoke wedding dresses.

David’s Bridal, the wedding dress retailer, suggested in a bankruptcy filing this year that some brides had become increasing­ly budget-conscious.

An “increasing number of brides are opting for lesstradit­ional wedding attire, including thrift wedding dresses,” James Marcum, the company’s CEO, said in a court filing.

Like much of the economy, the wedding industry has shown signs of a split, as higher earners find that they are able to reach into their savings and keep spending, while lower-income families that spend a bigger share of their earnings on necessitie­s such as food begin to crack under the weight of inflation.

LVMH, the luxury retail group that owns jewelers including Tiffany, reported continued growth in early 2023, including solid sales of jewelry.

“Everybody was expecting 2023 to be a horrendous year for luxury in the U.S.,” Jeanjacque­s Guiony, LVMH’S chief financial officer, told investors in April, explaining that a collapse had not materializ­ed. “It’s normalizin­g, but it’s not bad, either.”

But at more mass-market brands including Kay and Zales, shoppers may be starting to pull back.

“We began to see softening at higher price points, which previously had been relatively insulated, and lower price points remained under pressure,” Joan Hilson, Signet’s finance chief, said during Thursday’s call.

Signet is hoping wedding-ring demand will bounce back: It is predicting 500,000 more engagement­s from 2024 to 2026 than the prepandemi­c trend would suggest, as dating delayed by the lockdowns leads to matches. But analysts at Bank of America “worry that some of that rebound will be offset” by a “pinched consumer” spending less on jewelry, they wrote.

Shane Mcmurray, founder of the Wedding Report, is skeptical of a big gap year in engagement­s. He expects weddings to fall 20 percent in 2023 from 2022 levels as trends return to normal. And Lyman Stone, director of research at the consulting firm Demographi­c Intelligen­ce, agreed that the current slowdown in weddings might reflect a return to previous trends rather than a one-off weakening.

“It does look like 2023 is going to be a low year,” he said. “I do think that placing the blame for that on lockdowns in 2020 is a little bit strained.”

 ?? ASTRID STAWIARZ GETTY IMAGES ?? Signet Jewelers lowered its forecasts for sales this year, blaming a drop in engagement­s that stemmed from COVID lockdowns in 2020.
ASTRID STAWIARZ GETTY IMAGES Signet Jewelers lowered its forecasts for sales this year, blaming a drop in engagement­s that stemmed from COVID lockdowns in 2020.

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