The Line Card Pulse is a quick, curated roundup of key news in furniture and lighting, turned into practical signals for revenue leaders and sales teams.
CPI hit 4.2% in May, its highest in three years, with gasoline up 40.5% year-over-year. The Home Furnishings Sentiment Index just collapsed 64 points in a single quarter — from an all-time high of 142 to 78. Transpacific container rates have doubled since January. The IEEPA refund is real, but Phase 3 funds are being withheld from brands that didn't file a CIT lawsuit. And RH just turned its battleship and pointed it at the design trade.
There are two genuine positives this week: existing-home sales hit a five-month high, and Berkshire Hathaway's $6.8B bet on homebuilding signals long-term confidence in U.S. housing. Both matter, but neither rescues H2 2026. The brands that emerge stronger are the ones making decisions now.
BLS May CPI: +0.5% MoM, +4.2% YoY — the highest annual rate since April 2023. Energy rose 3.9% in May (23.5% YoY); gasoline surged 7.0% MoM and 40.5% YoY. Core CPI (ex food and energy) was 2.9%, indicating tariff-driven goods inflation is muted. The BLS specifically noted that "household furnishings and operations" was one of the categories that decreased in May.
Consumers are paying 40% more for gas while furniture prices fall. U.S. retail gasoline averaged $4.31/gallon by June 1. Moody's Mark Zandi told CNBC oil could hit $140/barrel if the Iran conflict persists — and even after de-escalation, a "Strait of Hormuz risk premium" keeps prices elevated.
WHY IT MATTERS
Every dollar spent at the pump is a dollar not spent on furniture. The CPI decrease in household furnishings confirms that the category is losing pricing power — competitors are already cutting price to chase demand. Don't follow them.
Hold the line on pricing. Invest the same dollars in dealer support, product newness, and trade engagement. A brand that discounts into a soft market exits the cycle with lower prices, lower margins, and lower equity.
The energy shock is structural, not transient. Build all 2026 cost-to-serve models around $4.00+ gas and $120+ crude. Any rep travel, delivery route, or showroom logistics budget set before Q2 should be revised now.
Sources: BLS CPI Summary · CNBC · Fox Business
NAR reports existing-home sales rose 3.2% MoM and 3.2% YoY in May to 4.17 million — the highest since December 2025. First-time buyers hit 35% of transactions (highest since June 2020). Inventory rose to 1.55 million units (4.5-month supply). Median price: record $429,300 (35th consecutive month of YoY gains). Freddie Mac's 30-year fixed averaged 6.52% for the week ending June 11.
The bifurcation is explicit in the data: sales of homes priced above $1 million were 11% higher YoY. Sales of homes priced $100K–$250K were down 5%. The recovery is concentrated where mortgage rates matter least.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: NAR Existing-Home Sales · HousingWire · Freddie Mac PMMS · CNBC
The Q2 Home Furnishings Sentiment Index fell from an all-time high of 142 in Q1 to 78 in Q2 — a 64-point single-quarter drop that matches the Q4 2025 trough. "Current state of business" hit 44 — second-lowest ever, with zero respondents rating business as "excellent." Expected consumer demand fell nearly 40 points to its lowest score on record. Oil/gas prices (81%) and geopolitical conflicts (61%, up from 31%) displaced tariffs as the top concerns. Capital investment scored second-lowest since tracking began; hiring intent fell from 97 to 88.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Furniture Today
NeoCon 2026 (June 8–10, Chicago) debuted Illuminate at NeoCon — a dedicated lighting show-within-a-show featuring 50+ brands including Juniper, Axis Lighting, Marset, Estiluz, Focal Point, and PureEdge Lighting. Lightovation runs June 24–27 in Dallas, with a new Design + Build Day (June 23) co-led by Business of Home editor Kaitlin Petersen and Custom Builder editor Pauline Hammerbeck. Note: FIFA World Cup activity in Dallas is driving elevated hotel demand — book now.
Lighting is investing in new trade venues and expanding into commercial/contract specification while furniture cuts capital budgets. That divergence will compound.
WHY IT MATTERS
Brands attending Lightovation: book hotels immediately given FIFA-related demand in Dallas. The Design + Build Day (June 23) with BOH and Custom Builder editorial leadership is the highest-value programming at the event
Sources: NeoCon · Surface & Panel
CNBC/NRF Retail Monitor for May: furniture and home furnishings stores were up 3.35% YoY unadjusted but down 0.09% MoM seasonally adjusted. Core retail (ex restaurants, autos, gas) grew 0.39% MoM and 6.98% YoY. The Census Bureau DOC retail data for May releases June 17.
The card-data view remains more favorable than government data. The divergence reflects segmentation: top-end buyers are transacting; mid-market buyers are deferring. Both data sources are telling the truth about different customers.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Furniture Today / NRF · NRF Retail Monitor
Transpacific rates have roughly doubled since January. West Coast containers now run $4,000–$4,850/FEU; East Coast lanes are higher. Maersk adds a surcharge June 17. CMA CGM follows July 10 with a fee The Loadstar called "shock and awe" larger than what a full container cost in Q1. July will be worse.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: The Loadstar · Hellenic Shipping News · Drewry WCI · Maersk PSS Notice
CBP has processed over 16 million entries under Phase 1, accepted $89 billion in potential refunds, and disbursed approximately $22 billion to Treasury. Business of Home reports $20 billion has been returned to importers since the CAPE portal opened in late April, with $65 billion more on the way. Phase 2 (reconciliation entries) launches June 29 and could cover $28.7B more. Phase 3 (finally liquidated entries) targets late July — but only for the approximately 4,000 importers who have filed CIT lawsuits.
Brands that did not file a protective CIT suit may not recover duties on their oldest entries. Additionally, Business of Home reports that President Trump has warned he would "remember" companies that filed for reimbursements — a political overhang that some brands are weighing against the economics of recovery.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: CBP IEEPA Duty Refunds · Holland & Knight · Green Worldwide · Business of Home
Berkshire Hathaway agreed to acquire Taylor Morrison Home Corp. for $6.8 billion in cash — $72.50/share, a 24% premium to the prior close. This is the first major acquisition under new Berkshire CEO Greg Abel, who took over from Warren Buffett in January 2026. Berkshire already owns residential broker HomeServices of America and holds stakes in several homebuilders.
Berkshire does not pay 24% premiums for short-term trades. This is a long-duration vote of confidence in U.S. housing demand — the most meaningful institutional signal in months for the medium-term outlook of furniture and lighting.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Business of Home
NRF's Global Port Tracker projects a June cargo surge as retailers proactively hedge against expected freight hikes and tariff actions later in the year. Furniture Today editor-in-chief Bill McLoughlin notes a similar pull-forward occurred in July 2025 and mid-2024: "U.S. retailers are developing a longer-term strategy as a hedge against uncertainty around pricing and availability of fourth quarter goods." Dealers are shortening supply lines, narrowing purchase windows, and focusing on proven sellers over new introductions.
This is a structural shift in dealer behavior — not a temporary response. The "buy big, plan ahead, take the bet" model is being replaced by "buy small, hedge often, stick with proven sellers."
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Furniture Today · NRF Global Port Tracker / NRF Press Release