Consumer sentiment improves more than expected
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Most shoppers say they’ll switch brands over tariff-driven price hikes—yet 77% of retailers plan to raise prices anyway, a new First Insight survey finds.
Researchers are tracking the impact of tariffs on consumer prices in real time — and even as policy gets tweaked, prices are mostly heading higher.
The mass merchant is looking to turn around falling sales and declining customer sentiment. But first, it needs to diagnose its own problems.
Retailers are facing an increasingly difficult balancing act — protect profit margins or keep prices steady — as the Trump administration’s volatile tariff policy sends shockwaves through supply chains and earnings reports alike.
Over the next four years, automakers are expected to launch 159 new vehicles; traditionally, that number is over 200.
Experts, lawmakers, and industry people—alongside Canadian officials—have issued stark warnings about Trump's plan.
The retailer announced earlier this year it would phase out long-term diversity, equity and inclusion goals after a conservative-led backlash.
Target missed Wall Street expectations and cut its guidance for the year on Wednesday as it grapples with tariff uncertainty, declining consumer confidence and backlash over its rollback of its ...