The United States Redbook Index for year-on-year change showed a 6.7% increase as of 30th January. This marks a decline from the previous year’s figure of 7.1%.
The decrease in the index may suggest shifts in consumer spending behaviours. Monitoring such trends could provide insights into the retail market’s performance over this period.
Deceleration in Consumer Spending
We are seeing a clear deceleration in year-over-year consumer spending growth with the latest Redbook Index data. This slowdown from 7.1% to 6.7% suggests the post-holiday spending momentum is waning. This is a critical signal that consumer resilience may be starting to crack under persistent inflationary pressures.
This single data point aligns with other recent troubling signs for the U.S. consumer. The New York Fed’s latest report on household debt for Q4 2025 showed credit card delinquency rates rose to 3.4%, a level we haven’t seen since before the pandemic. Furthermore, the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index for January 2026 unexpectedly dipped to 68.8, reinforcing the idea of growing consumer caution.
This pattern reminds us of the environment in late 2024, when strong headline data initially masked underlying weakness just before the market downturn in the first quarter of 2025. Back then, we saw a similar dip in discretionary spending indicators precede a broader sell-off. We must consider if history is repeating itself and position accordingly for increased volatility.
Strategic Options in Volatile Markets
For the coming weeks, we should consider defensive options strategies, such as buying puts on the Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLY) to hedge against a further decline. The weakening consumer data also increases the probability of higher market volatility. Therefore, looking at call options on the VIX for February and March could provide an effective hedge against a wider market correction.
The slowdown in spending also changes the calculus for Federal Reserve policy later this year. If this trend continues, it weakens the case for any further rate hikes and may even bring forward the timeline for potential cuts. We should therefore monitor options on the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT), as a more dovish Fed would be bullish for long-duration bonds.