Market Overview - Cooling inflation signals have led to a valuation recovery in overseas consumer assets, with the U.S. bipartisan push for credit card interest rate cap legislation creating uncertainty in the credit card sector[1] - Weekly performance of sectors shows U.S. hotels leading with a 3.1% increase, followed by overseas sportswear at 2.5% and luxury goods at 2.2%[11] Sector Performance - The U.S. hotel sector's strong performance is attributed to Marriott and Hilton, with Marriott's Q4 2025 adjusted EBITDA exceeding market expectations, reaching $5.84 billion to $5.93 billion[6] - Overseas sportswear saw a 2.5% increase, driven by a lower-than-expected January CPI of 2.4%, enhancing Fed rate cut expectations[13] - Luxury goods increased by 2.2%, with Hermès up 4.5% due to better-than-expected FY2025 results, while LVMH fell by 4.1% due to disappointing performance in key segments[8] Consumer Trends - The jewelry sector has shown resilience, with a year-to-date increase of 13.7%, outperforming other sectors[11] - Domestic sportswear increased by 0.3%, with Anta Sports rising 4.6% following the acquisition of a stake in PUMA[13] Challenges - The credit card sector faced a significant decline of 5.5%, influenced by proposed legislation to cap interest rates, which could severely impact profitability[14] - The snack sector dropped by 4.6%, with companies like Three Squirrels experiencing a 6.2% decline due to substantial drops in e-commerce sales across major platforms[14] Valuation Insights - Valuations across various sectors remain below the historical five-year averages, with overseas sportswear expected PE at 30.1x, only 57% of the past average[9] - The luxury sector's expected PE is 26.2x, representing 49% of its historical average, indicating potential for future growth as market conditions stabilize[9]
可选消费W07周度趋势解析:通胀降温信号带动海外消费类资产估值修复,美国政界跨党派联手推动信用卡利率上限立法
2026-02-23 10:50