“The Bear Market Economics Phenomenon” is an observation of Political Economics. Wall Street Admits: ‘We Got Rich Off the Backs of Workers’ thus creating the Bear Market. The Bear Market is America's default war.
The ethic of Wall Street is the ethic of celebrity. It is fused into one bizarre, perverted belief system and it has banished the possibility of the country returning to a reality-based world or avoiding internal collapse. A society that cannot distinguish reality from illusion dies.
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In
Manhattan, the upscale clothing retailer Barneys will replace the
bankrupt discounter Loehmann’s, whose Chelsea store closes in a few
weeks. Across the country, Olive Garden and Red Lobster restaurants are
struggling, while fine-dining chains like Capital Grille are thriving.
And at General Electric, the increase in demand for high-end dishwashers
and refrigerators dwarfs sales growth of mass-market models.
As
politicians and pundits in Washington continue to spar over whether
economic inequality is in fact deepening, in corporate America there
really is no debate at all. The post-recession reality is that the
customer base for businesses that appeal to the middle class is
shrinking as the top tier pulls even further away.
If there is any doubt, the speed at which companies are adapting to the
new consumer landscape serves as very convincing evidence. Within top
consulting firms and among Wall Street analysts, the shift is being
described with a frankness more often associated with left-wing
academics than business experts.
“Those
consumers who have capital like real estate and stocks and are in the
top 20 percent are feeling pretty good,” said John G. Maxwell, head of
the global retail and consumer practice at Price Waterhouse Coopers.
In
response to the upward shift in spending, PricewaterhouseCoopers
clients like big stores and restaurants are chasing richer customers
with a wider offering of high-end goods and services, or focusing on
rock-bottom prices to attract the expanding ranks of penny-pinching
consumers.
“As
a retailer or restaurant chain, if you’re not at the really high level
or the low level, that’s a tough place to be,” Mr. Maxwell said. “You
don’t want to be stuck in the middle.”
Although data on consumption is less readily available than figures that show a comparable split in income gains, new research
by the economists Steven Fazzari, of Washington University in St.
Louis, and Barry Cynamon, of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis,
backs up what is already apparent in the marketplace.
In
2012, the top 5 percent of earners were responsible for 38 percent of
domestic consumption, up from 28 percent in 1995, the researchers found.
Even
more striking, the current recovery has been driven almost entirely by
the upper crust, according to Mr. Fazzari and Mr. Cynamon. Since 2009,
the year the recession ended, inflation-adjusted spending by this top
echelon has risen 17 percent, compared with just 1 percent among the
bottom 95 percent.
More
broadly, about 90 percent of the overall increase in inflation-adjusted
consumption between 2009 and 2012 was generated by the top 20 percent
of households in terms of income, according to the study, which was
sponsored by the Institute for New Economic Thinking, a research group
in New York.
The
effects of this phenomenon are now rippling through one sector after
another in the American economy, from retailers and restaurants to
hotels, casinos and even appliance makers.
For
example, luxury gambling properties like Wynn and the Venetian in Las
Vegas are booming, drawing in more high rollers than regional casinos in
Atlantic City, upstate New York and Connecticut, which attract a less
affluent clientele who are not betting as much, said Steven Kent, an
analyst at Goldman Sachs.
Among
hotels, revenue per room in the high-end category, which includes
brands like the Four Seasons and St. Regis, grew 7.5 percent in 2013,
compared with a 4.1 percent gain for midscale properties like Best
Western, according to Smith Travel Research.
While
spending among the most affluent consumers has managed to propel the
economy forward, the sharpening divide is worrying, Mr. Fazzari said.
“It’s
going to be hard to maintain strong economic growth with such a large
proportion of the population falling behind,” he said. “We might be able
to muddle along — but can we really recover?”
Mr.
Fazzari also said that depending on a relatively small but affluent
slice of the population to drive demand makes the economy more volatile,
because this group does more discretionary spending that can rise and
fall with the stock market, or track seesawing housing prices. The
run-up on Wall Street in recent years has only heightened these trends,
said Guy Berger, an economist at RBS, who estimates that 50 percent of
Americans have no effective participation in the surging stock market,
even counting retirement accounts.
Regardless,
affluent shoppers like Mitchell Goldberg, an independent investment
manager in Dix Hills, N.Y., say the rising stock market has encouraged
people to open their wallets and purses more.
“Opulence
isn’t back, but we’re spending a little more comfortably,” Mr. Goldberg
said. He recently replaced his old Nike golf clubs with Callaway
drivers and Adams irons, bought a Samsung tablet for work and traded in
his minivan for a sport utility vehicle.
And
while the superrich garner much of the attention, most companies are
building their business strategies around a broader slice of affluent
consumers.
At
G.E. Appliances, for example, the fastest-growing brand is the Café
line, which is aimed at the top quarter of the market, with
refrigerators typically retailing for $1,700 to $3,000.
“This
is a person who is willing to pay for features, like a double-oven
range or a refrigerator with hot water,” said Brian McWaters, a general
manager in G.E.'s Appliance division.
At street level, the divide is even more stark.
Sears
and J. C. Penney, retailers whose wares are aimed squarely at
middle-class Americans, are both in dire straits. Last month, Sears said
it would shutter its flagship store on State Street in downtown
Chicago, and J. C. Penney announced the closings of 33 stores and 2,000
layoffs.
Loehmann’s,
where generations of middle-class shoppers hunted for marked-down
designer labels in the famed Back Room, is now being liquidated after
three trips to bankruptcy court since 1999.
The
Loehmann’s store in Chelsea, like all 39 Loehmann’s outlets nationwide,
will go dark as soon as the last items sell. Barneys New York, which
started in the same location in 1923 before moving to a more luxurious
spot on Madison Avenue two decades ago, plans to reopen a store on the
site in 2017.
Investors
have taken notice of the shrinking middle. Shares of Sears and J. C.
Penney have fallen more than 50 percent since the end of 2009, even as
upper-end stores like Nordstrom and bargain-basement chains like Dollar
Tree and Family Dollar Stores have more than doubled in value over the
same period.
Competition
from online giants like Amazon has only added to the problems faced by
old-line retailers, of course. But changes in the restaurant business
show that the effects of rising inequality are widespread.
A
shift at Darden, which calls itself the world’s largest full-service
restaurant owner, encapsulates the trend. Foot traffic at midtier,
casual dining properties like Red Lobster and Olive Garden has dropped
in every quarter but one since 2005, according to John Glass, a
restaurant industry analyst at Morgan Stanley.
With
diners paying an average tab of $16.50 a person at Olive Garden, Mr.
Glass said, “The customers are middle class. They’re not rich. They’re
not poor.” With income growth stagnant and prices for necessities like
health care and education on the rise, he said, “They are cutting back.”
On the other hand, at the Capital Grille, an upscale Darden chain where
the average check per person is about $71, spending is up by an average
of 5 percent annually over the last three years.
LongHorn
Steakhouse, another Darden chain, has been reworked to target a
slightly more affluent crowd than Olive Garden, with décor intended to
evoke a cattleman’s ranch instead of an Old West theme.
Now,
hedge fund investors are pressuring Darden’s management to break up the
company and spin out the more upscale properties into a separate
entity.
“A
separation could make sense from a strategic perspective,” Mr. Glass
said. “Generally, the specialty restaurant group is more attractive
demographically.”
A version of this article appears in print on February 3, 2014, on page A1 of the New York edition with the headline: The Middle Class Is Steadily Eroding. Just Ask the Business World..
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