In this week’s Steady Investor, we break down the market forces driving today’s headlines and the indicators that matter most for your next financial decision, such as:
Is a $2,000 “Tariff Dividend” a Good Idea? Last weekend, the Trump administration floated a plan to send $2,000 payments to most households, framed as stimulus funded by tariff revenue. This announcement garnered a lot of headlines. But if we’re being fair here, many policy pronouncements like this one get made, receive a lot of attention, and then die on the vine. This particular announcement might be one of those, with the Supreme Court set to decide the legal standing of tariffs, and thus tariff revenue. From a market and economic standpoint, however, the key question is not necessarily what impact such stimulus would have on spending, which is fleeting. It’s the impact such a stimulus would have on inflation. If checks land while unemployment is still relatively low and service capacity remains tight, the near-term impact can slow disinflation, especially in categories that had been easing. Goods inflation can easily return in an environment where households ratchet up short-term spending as companies reorient supply chains. If higher-income households are excluded, the aggregate outlay is smaller, but the propensity to spend among recipients is higher. Net-net, the risk skews toward a short, visible demand and money supply pop that could drive inflation up, without the benefit of sustained growth in spending. For now, it’s a headline with a hypothetical foundation. But if it advances, the signposts are clear: watch money supply and expect inflation to drift higher.1
How to Stay Disciplined as Inflation Pressures Shift
Consumer sentiment is weakening, inflation progress is uneven, and market noise is rising. In moments like this, it is easy to react to headlines, but history shows that stepping out during uncertainty often means missing the recoveries that drive long-run returns.
To help you stay grounded in today’s environment, download our free retirement guide How Market Timing Can Affect Your Retirement Plan2, which explains:
If you have $500,000 or more to invest and want to learn more, click on the link below to get your free copy:
Download Zacks Guide, “How Market Timing Can Affect Your Retirement Plan.”2
U.S. Households Aren’t Feeling Great About the Economy (With One Exception) – The latest University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment survey shows households feeling increasingly frustrated with the economy. The Michigan survey slipped again in early November (50.3 vs. 53.6 in October), hovering near cycle lows and likely connected to the headline risk posed by the shutdown. Prices also remain a concern, with inflation still stuck around ~3% y/y. Layoffs are also starting to get more attention. As has been the case for the better part of a year, however, the downbeat tone is sharpest among lower-income households and those without market exposure, where worries about jobs and day-to-day costs dominate.Middle-and-upper income households are less concerned, especially with equities near records. JPMorgan attributes about one-sixth of the past year’s consumption growth to the wealth effect from owning stocks. Research generally finds every $1,000 increase in equity wealth lifts spending by roughly $35–$50, and the top 20% of earners, who hold about 87% of stocks and mutual funds, are leaning into that cushion.
That split leaves the expansion more sensitive to markets than usual. If mega-cap tech cools or volatility picks up, the same wealth effect supporting premium travel, home upgrades, and discretionary services can work in reverse.3
Consumers May be Entering an Era of Tiered Pricing for Credit Cards – In what’s been a decades-long dispute between credit card companies and U.S. merchants, there may be a settlement at hand that would give stores more latitude in how they accept and price credit cards. Court approval is still pending, and challenges are likely, but if the settlement sticks, consumers may very well see tiered pricing at the cash register. The big shift would be pricing by card category. Instead of a single “credit card fee,” merchants could apply different surcharges to basic versus premium/rewards cards, reflecting the different interchange costs. These are changes that would roll out over time, but ultimately, networks could potentially add clearer visual markers to cards so staff (and customers) can tell which ‘bucket’/tier a card is in. Surveys suggest many shoppers switch payment methods to avoid a 3%–4% surcharge, so early adoption may cluster in small-ticket, low-margin categories—coffee, quick service, salons, repair shops, where pennies count.Another change allows selective acceptance within a network. Today, if a merchant accepts Visa cards, for instance, they accept all types of Visas. The settlement would let merchants accept some broad categories and decline others. Analysts don’t expect widespread refusals; blocking a card category risks blocking a lot of spend, but it gives merchants negotiating leverage and a steering tool towards ‘cheaper’ cards.4
How to Avoid Costly Mistakes in Uncertain Markets – Choppy data and shifting headlines can push investors to act on emotion, often at the exact wrong time. Selling during uncertainty or trying to catch the “perfect entry” can derail a retirement plan more than the volatility itself.
Before making any big changes, download our free guide How Market Timing Can Affect Your Retirement Plan5, which outlines common behavioral traps and practical ways to stay focused on your long-term strategy. Inside, you’ll learn:
If you have $500,000 or more to invest and want to learn more, click on the link below to get your free copy:
Disclosure