Economy
Related: About this forumCorporations on the front lines of the economy say cracks are forming
Corporations on the front lines of the economy say cracks are forming
Big tech, retail companies and consumer giants painted a mixed picture of a consumer economy where spending is still strong but beginning to wane
By Gerrit De Vynck, Rachel Lerman and Caroline O'Donovan
July 30, 2022 at 6:00 a.m. EDT
In recent days, executives from the biggest tech, retail and consumer products companies all attempted to address questions about the state of the economy, which has teetered on the brink of a recession. ... Its complicated.
In Silicon Valley, profits at tech companies like Google and Apple generally beat expectations, but executives said there are signs of some niche slowing in consumer spending. Consumer products giant Procter & Gamble said it is expecting a tougher 2023, although its still raising prices. Mastercard said spending was steady among the wealthy, but slowing among lower-income customers.
Meanwhile, both Walmart and Best Buy warned that when they report earnings in August, it will be worse than expected in large part because of changes in consumer habits. ... Were seeing strong growth, said Amazon Chief Financial Officer Brian Olsavsky. But were cognizant things could change quickly.
Four times a year, the biggest publicly traded companies report how much money theyre making or losing, in addition to future outlooks. Those reports provide helpful snapshots of how consumers are spending, a key metric for predicting economic performance.
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By Gerrit De Vynck
Gerrit De Vynck is a tech reporter for The Washington Post. He writes about Google and the algorithms that increasingly shape society. De Vynck also helps lead The Post's coverage of ransomware and misinformation. He previously covered tech for seven years at Bloomberg News. Twitter https://twitter.com/GerritD
By Rachel Lerman
Rachel Lerman covers breaking news in technology for The Washington Post. Twitter https://twitter.com/rachelerman
By Caroline O'Donovan
Caroline O'Donovan covers Amazon for the tech team. Before joining The Washington Post, she covered tech and labor for BuzzFeed News. Twitter https://twitter.com/ceodonovan
bucolic_frolic
(46,999 posts)Powell's Fed will try to steer between those two outcomes and wind up with both.
JT45242
(2,903 posts)If you jack up all your prices needlessly (or at least a lot more than necessary) to have two quarters of the largest percentage profits ever to buy back stock from C-suite folks, eventually, customers will stop buying.
But, to these corporations, it is totally worth it to have some short term slightly lower than expected profits to damage Biden and the Dems so that a new wave of corporate welfare and tax breaks can be ushered in by their rethugs henchmen after the midterm.
As Robert Reich says, we socialize risk for the wealthiest and the cruelest of capitalism for the poor.
But these are short term losses... Walmart won the ling game a long time ago when they killed most of the competition.
jimfields33
(18,900 posts)President Biden will never sign off such garbage.