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.
Two cliffs, 17 days apart. July 10: CMA CGM's $4,000/FEU peak surcharge hits Asia-U.S. lanes — East Coast rates already above $8,000/FEU. July 24: the Section 122 10% Vietnam tariff expires, and USTR Section 301 investigations could replace it with 25%, pushing Vietnamese furniture to 35% effective — matching China. A container that cost $3,500 in April could clear customs in August at $6,000+ in freight alone, before any tariff increase applies.
The macro frame locked in simultaneously. Warsh's first FOMC dropped forward guidance, and nine of 18 officials now expect a rate hike by December. PCE hit 4.1% — a two-year high. June payrolls came in at 57,000 against a 115,000 expectation.
Two countersignals matter: wellness is the one category where consumers plan to spend more in 2026, and Ikea opened three U.S. stores in six weeks. The industry is bifurcating. The next 17 days will make that visible.
June nonfarm payrolls rose just 57,000 — well below the 115,000 Dow Jones consensus. Prior months were revised down a combined 74,000 (April: -31K, May: -43K). Unemployment ticked to 4.2%, but only because the labor force participation rate fell to 61.5% (its lowest since March 2021) and household employment fell by 507,000. Job gains concentrated in professional services, social assistance, and healthcare; leisure and hospitality lost jobs.
One positive: Freddie Mac's 30-year fixed averaged 6.43% for the week ending July 2 — a seven-week low. Freddie Mac's Sam Khater noted purchase demand "continuing to edge higher" as buyers respond to modest affordability improvement.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: BLS Employment Situation, CNBC, Freddie Mac PMMS
The Section 122 10% reciprocal tariff on Vietnamese furniture expires July 24. USTR has active Section 301 investigations covering 16 countries that could impose 15–25% country-specific rates as replacements. Trade attorneys at Mowry & Grimson told Furniture Today the timing "suggests they may serve as a longer-term replacement" for Section 122.
Vietnam now ships more furniture to the U.S. than China — approximately $14B in 2025 vs. $10B from China. A 25% Section 301 layer takes Vietnamese furniture from 10% effective to 35%, matching China. Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaysia face the same exposure.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Furniture Today, Tariffs Tool, USTR, Federal Register
Asia-to-USEC spot rates hit $7,998/FEU — up 8% week-over-week and 85% since mid-May. Asia-to-USWC: $6,175/FEU, up 120% since mid-May, now above last summer's frontloading peak. CMA CGM's July 10 PSS is confirmed: $4,000/40ft on all Asia-U.S. shipments. MSC has layered its own surcharges effective July 1. Freightos head of research: East Coast rates are "$1,000/FEU higher than last year's frontloading-driven summer high."
Combined with a potential Vietnam tariff jump on July 24, the same SKU that shipped at approximately $3,500 landed cost plus 10% tariff in April could cost $6,200 in freight alone plus up to 35% tariff in early August. That is a 40%+ landed-cost swing in 90 days.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: STU Supply Chain, The Loadstar, Container News
Per Furniture Today (July 1), Q2 saw Ikea open three U.S. stores in six weeks: Rockwall TX (108,875 sq ft), Webster TX (93,000 sq ft), and Chantilly VA (107,000 sq ft), bringing its Texas count to 10. Wayfair announced two additional physical locations. Raymour & Flanigan opened its 151st showroom. National chains, regional players, and DTC brands all added footprints.
This is the counter-narrative to the Q2 Sentiment Index collapse. The strongest, best-capitalized retailers are expanding aggressively while weaker independents contract. Physical retail is consolidating.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Furniture Today
Home Accents Today reports that Lightovation (June 24–27, Dallas) showed manufacturers "no longer as stymied by tariffs," launching hundreds of new collections built on "affordable luxury" — acrylic in place of crystal, resin alabaster for natural stone, painted steel as a brass alternative. Traditional candelabra chandeliers, lanterns, and scalloped pendants in updated expressions dominated. Attendance was hurt by overlapping FIFA World Cup matches in Dallas.
Kalco announced a catalog-wide price reduction effective June 22, explicitly citing "the recent reduction in United States tariff rates" and setting a new MAP policy at 2.0x DN pricing. It is the first public pricing reduction by a lighting brand citing tariff relief.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Home Accents Today, Lighting News Now
Business of Home's Summer 2026 issue (Issue 40) names wellness at home "one of design's biggest growth opportunities." Research cited in the issue found that even as consumers cut spending broadly, wellness is the one category where they plan to spend more in 2026. The category spans nontoxic materials, biophilic design, health-monitoring devices, spa bathrooms, primary-suite retreats, and residences designed to extend lifespan. The human-scale lighting story is explicitly aligned to the movement.
Designers are actively seeking brands with credible wellness and material-transparency narratives. Consumer research confirms the spend intent. This is a purchase-driver shift.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: Business of Home, Business of Home
Registration for Fall High Point Market (October 17–21) opens in late July. Premarket is scheduled September 13–15 — organized by participating showrooms, with precedent of 100+ companies presenting key introductions ahead of the full market. ANDMORE permanent showrooms open October 17 with a 6 PM close.
Fall Market planning is the industry's largest single sales-and-marketing investment cycle. It is now 102 days away. Premarket is 68 days away. The operational uncertainties are all compounding against an unchanged calendar.
WHY IT MATTERS
Sources: High Point Market Authority, ANDMORE at High Point Market