All the spending growth in the US economy is from the wealthy

Forex Short News

Delta Airlines reported earnings today and it was one of the strongest indications yet that there are two distinct economies in the US: The rich and everyone else. Where there was once the ‘haves’ and the ‘have nots’, there are now only the ‘have lots’ and everyone else.

Delta is making a deliberate shift away from economy seating to chase the only part of the consumer market that is still growing.

There is an old adage in the markets: “Don’t tell me what the economy is doing; tell me where the money is going.”

If you want to understand the 2026 US. consumer, look past the GDP print and straight into the cabin of a Delta 737..

“We are looking at our seat growth in the coming year. … Effectively, none of our growth in seats will be in the main cabin; virtually all will be in the premium sector,” Delta CEO Ed Bastian told reporters after today’s earnings release.

The numbers Delta reported for the fourth quarter are a study in contrast. While the headline figures beat expectations, the internal mechanics tell the real story:

  • Main Cabin: Revenue fell 7% to $5.62 billion.

  • Premium Products:: Revenue rose 9% to $5.7 billion.

For the first time in a quarterly result, premium revenue—the seats at the front of the plane—actually overtook the standard coach class.

As for the earnings themselves, the market was looking for a stronger guide for next year. Shares are down 3.7%.

Bastian had to cut the outlook last year after the uncertainty of Liberation Day.

“We’re not going to project or commit to a record earnings [forecast] until we understand the uncertainty,” he said today.

“I think we’re well aware of the risk factors,” he said. “This past year, and I think again this year … [will] be more of the geopolitical environment, whether that’s international or on domestic policy.”

As for the quarter itself, here were the top-line metrics:

  • Earnings per share: $1.55 adjusted vs. $1.53 expected
  • Revenue: $14.61 billion adjusted vs. $14.69 billion expected

Delta also announced it would buy 30 Boeing 787-10 Dreamliners, that’s helped to lift Boeing shares by 2.3%.

This article was written by Adam Button at investinglive.com.