Consumer sentiment slides, but retail spending holds for now
Retail and e-commerce are entering a fragile phase as they head into peak planning.
Consumer sentiment is falling again, but the implications for the industry are more complex than a single headline suggests. Beneath the surface, spending remains unevenly resilient, shaped by rising costs, geopolitical instability, and widening financial pressure across income groups.
For retail brands, the takeaway is not that demand is collapsing, but that demand is becoming more selective, more volatile, and increasingly tied to short-term economic signals. As peak season planning begins, that shift is already forcing changes in inventory and pricing strategies, as well as in fulfillment.
Below, Kase examines the latest consumer sentiment data and what it means for retail spending and peak season planning in 2026.
Sentiment drops to its lowest point this year
The University of Michigan’s March 2026 data shows consumer sentiment falling to 53.3, down 5.8% month over month and 6.5% year over year. Expectations declined even more sharply, dropping 8.7% month over month as households reassessed their near-term financial outlook.
The decline is closely tied to rising fuel costs and financial market volatility following the Iran conflict, which has already begun to influence inflation expectations and household budgets. Year-ahead inflation expectations climbed to 3.8%, the highest monthly jump since 2025.
Economists note that while long-term expectations remain relatively stable, short-term sentiment has deteriorated quickly, particularly among middle- and higher-income households exposed to market fluctuations and energy costs.
This aligns with broader global signals. In the U.K., consumer confidence has also weakened, with GfK reporting a drop in its index and a sharp decline in expectations for the year ahead. Retail sales volumes fell 0.4% between January and February, with further declines anticipated as energy costs rise.
Spending data tells a more nuanced story
Despite declining sentiment, spending has not collapsed. In fact, recent data suggests the consumer remains active, though increasingly constrained.
According to Bank of America Institute data, credit and debit card spending rose 3.2% year over year in February, the strongest growth in over three years, with a 0.9% month-over-month increase.
That growth, however, is not evenly distributed.
The so-called “k-shaped” consumer remains firmly in place. Higher-income households continue to outspend others, with 2.9% year-over-year growth compared to just 1.1% among lower-income households. Wage growth disparities are reinforcing that divide, with higher-income groups seeing 4.2% wage growth versus just 0.6% for lower-income groups.
Even as spending increases, the composition is shifting. Services like travel, dining, and lodging continue to drive growth, while retail categories show more mixed performance.
At the same time, early signs of stress are emerging. More consumers are making minimum credit card payments, and discretionary spending is slowing beneath the surface. American consumers are also falling behind on mortgage and student loan payments.
Retail Dive reporting confirms this pattern, noting that discretionary demand has already softened. Unit demand for discretionary goods fell 3% year over year in February, demonstrating that consumers may be spending more, but buying less.
Energy costs are becoming the pressure point
Energy prices are emerging as one of the most immediate drivers of both sentiment and spending behavior, affecting consumers, retailers, and the supply chain.
Historical analysis from Wells Fargo shows that spikes in gas prices can reduce consumer spending by up to 240 basis points within six to nine months.
That impact is already beginning to show. Rising fuel costs are increasing transportation and production expenses while simultaneously reducing disposable income. Economists warn that this dynamic effectively acts as a tax on consumers, redirecting spending away from discretionary categories like apparel and home goods.
Retailers are preparing for that reality, and have already been warned they may need to raise prices if current conditions persist. Brands have also flagged similar cost pressures tied to freight and energy.
The result is a dual challenge: softer demand paired with rising operational costs.
Retailers face a narrowing path forward
For retail and e-commerce brands, the current environment is defined less by contraction and more by constraint.
Consumers are still spending, but they are doing so more cautiously, often prioritizing experiences or delaying discretionary purchases. Tax refunds have provided a temporary boost in categories like electronics, apparel, and travel, but that lift is expected to fade.
At the same time, household budgets are tightening across essential categories, including housing, healthcare, and energy. Credit card delinquencies are rising, and buy-now-pay-later repayment challenges are increasing, further limiting future spending capacity.
This creates a more reactive consumer environment. Promotions, pricing changes, and external events are likely to drive sharper swings in demand throughout the year.
Retailers are already adjusting expectations. Some forecasts still project modest growth around 3% to 3.5% in 2026, but others suggest that this may be optimistic given current pressures.
What this means for peak season planning
Peak season planning is beginning under a different set of assumptions than in previous years.
First, demand is expected to be less predictable. Rather than a steady build throughout the year, brands should anticipate demand spikes tied to promotions, pay cycles, and external economic signals.
Second, inventory strategies are shifting. Holding excess inventory carries greater risk in an environment where discretionary demand is uncertain, but understocking creates exposure if demand returns quickly.
Third, pricing sensitivity is increasing. As inflation expectations rise, consumers are becoming more responsive to promotions and perceived value, particularly in non-essential categories.
Finally, timing matters more than ever. Shorter decision windows and faster shifts in demand are compressing the planning cycle for peak.
This indicates that peak season success in 2026 will likely depend less on forecasting accuracy and more on operational flexibility.
The role of 3PLs in a more volatile consumer environment
As demand becomes more uneven, the fulfillment strategy is playing a larger role in how brands respond.
3PL partners are increasingly being used to create optionality within the supply chain. That includes positioning inventory closer to demand centers, enabling faster fulfillment during demand spikes, and supporting more dynamic inventory allocation across channels.
Flexibility in transportation and fulfillment also helps offset cost pressures tied to fuel and capacity shifts. When demand changes quickly, the ability to reroute, rebalance, and scale operations becomes a competitive advantage.
For e-commerce brands, fulfillment partners can help navigate uncertainty in consumer behavior.
A consumer who is still spending, but thinking twice
The defining characteristic of the 2026 consumer is not retreat, but hesitation.
Spending remains intact, supported by wage growth in higher-income segments and residual savings. But pressure is building across multiple fronts, from energy costs to credit conditions to geopolitical uncertainty.
Consumer sentiment reflects that tension. It is not a signal of immediate collapse, but a warning that behavior is changing.
For retail and e-commerce brands, the coming months will test the ability to adapt to that shift. Those that can align pricing, inventory, and fulfillment with a more cautious, reactive consumer are likely to be best positioned as peak season approaches.
This story was produced by Kase and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.