The United States Redbook Index (YoY) increased to 9.1% in the week ending June 5, up from 9% in the prior period. The move points to a modest acceleration in annual retail sales growth as tracked by the Redbook measure.
The latest reading extends the index’s elevated pace compared with the previous week. Markets will watch whether the 9.1% YoY rate is sustained in subsequent releases, as it provides a timely gauge of consumer spending trends.
Consumer Spending And Implications For Fed Policy
We see the continued strength in consumer spending, confirmed by the Redbook Index, as a clear signal that the economy is running hot. This robust demand adds pressure on inflation, making it harder for the Federal Reserve to consider easing policy. Given that the latest CPI reading came in stubbornly high at 3.5%, we believe the market is under-pricing the risk of a more hawkish Fed stance through the rest of the year.
This leads us to anticipate higher short-term interest rates for longer than is currently priced in. We are therefore looking at positioning for this by selling September SOFR futures contracts, which would profit from a rise in expected rates. Historically, when strong consumer data persists in an inflationary environment, the Fed has been forced to act more aggressively than markets initially predict.
Market Positioning And Sector Divergence
For equity indices, this “good news is bad news” scenario likely means increased volatility and a potential headwind for the S&P 500. We are buying near-term VIX call options to hedge against a market correction driven by interest rate fears. This strategy is also supported by the S&P 500’s recent run-up of over 8% in the last quarter, which makes it vulnerable to a pullback.
Within the market, we see a clear divergence between sectors. We favor call options on the Consumer Discretionary ETF (XLY) to play the direct strength in spending but are buying put options on the rate-sensitive Technology ETF (XLK). This pair trade is designed to capitalize on the underlying economic trend while hedging against the broader market risk from higher rates.
Finally, the dollar should strengthen as policy divergence grows between a hawkish Fed and other central banks. Recent comments from the European Central Bank suggest a willingness to cut rates again, creating a favorable setup for the U.S. dollar. We are initiating long positions through call options on the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) to reflect this view.