US retail sales rose 0.9% month-on-month in May, exceeding the 0.5% forecast. The outturn indicates faster consumer spending growth over the period than markets had expected.
On a month-on-month basis, the 0.9% reading was 0.4 percentage points above the 0.5% consensus estimate. The release adds to the latest run of US activity data for May, with retail sales often used as a timely gauge of household demand.
Economic Resilience and Monetary Policy Outlook
The strong May retail sales figure, coming in at 0.9%, shows the consumer is much more resilient than anticipated. We believe this makes a summer interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve highly unlikely. This robust spending, combined with the recent jobs report showing over 270,000 positions added, signals that the economy continues to run hot.
Consequently, we are looking at positions that bet on interest rates staying higher for longer. This involves considering short positions in Treasury futures or buying puts on interest rate futures for the end of the year, as the market may need to price out expected rate cuts. The latest CPI data, with core inflation still hovering around 3.4%, supports this view that the Fed’s work isn’t done.
Investment Strategies Amid Market Volatility
For equity indexes, this creates a tricky situation where a strong economy supports earnings but high rates pressure valuations. We see this uncertainty increasing market choppiness, making call options on the VIX an attractive hedge for the coming weeks. This environment is reminiscent of the 2022-2023 period, where surprising economic strength kept volatility elevated despite a rising market.
Within the stock market, we favor call options on consumer discretionary ETFs, as they directly benefit from this strong spending trend. Conversely, we are cautious on rate-sensitive sectors like utilities and real estate, where put options could provide downside protection. These sectors historically underperform when the market believes the central bank will remain hawkish.
The expectation of a more assertive Fed should also provide a strong tailwind for the U.S. dollar. We are looking at long positions in dollar index futures or call options on dollar-tracking ETFs. This stance is further bolstered by signs of continued economic weakness in Europe, where the ECB has already begun its own easing cycle.