Roots CEO sees consumers getting back to discretionary spending in back half of year
TORONTO — Roots Corp. executives say the back half of 2024 will likely see consumers edging back into purchasing discretionary goods they forewent as inflation and interest rates climbed.
“Interest rates are playing a big impact on consumer discretionary spending broadly. We saw that in the fourth quarter and we expect to continue to see that in the first half of the year,” Meghan Roach, chief executive of the Toronto-based apparel manufacturer, said on a Wednesday call with analysts.
“Our expectation, I think, consistent with the market’s expectation, is that there should be some easing of that into the second half of the year, which should have a positive effect on consumer discretionary in general.”
Roach’s optimism around the consumer’s willingness to spend comes as many feel the Bank of Canada will begin cutting its key lending rate in the coming months. Should the central bank make such a move, it would ease some of the financial pressures Canadians with hefty mortgage payments have been feeling.