Stock Markets April 23, 2026 09:21 AM

Barclays Says Off-Price Retailers Best Positioned If Middle East Oil Shock Worsens

Bank flags TJX, Ross and Burlington as defensive plays while traditional apparel names face acute pressure from higher fuel and input costs

By Derek Hwang TJX ROST
Barclays Says Off-Price Retailers Best Positioned If Middle East Oil Shock Worsens
TJX ROST

Barclays analysts warn that an oil-price shock tied to the Middle East conflict could compress retail profits across the board, but off-price chains and certain recurring-consumption retailers are expected to be relatively resilient. The bank highlights clean inventories, controlled promotions and tax refunds as current supports for consumer spending, but cautions that input and operating cost pressures as well as demand destruction can hit margins quickly.

Key Points

  • Barclays identifies off-price retailers - including TJX, Ross Stores and Burlington - as the most defensive retail exposure in the event of an oil-price shock.
  • The bank notes that consumer spending has remained supported by clean inventories, controlled promotions and tax refunds, but warns oil shocks affect profitability through both demand erosion and higher input and operating costs.
  • Recurring-consumption retailers such as Ulta Beauty and National Vision are also seen as relatively resilient because consumers must replenish those categories even under tighter macro conditions.

Barclays says a spike in oil prices stemming from the Middle East conflict could materially reshape the U.S. discretionary retail sector, singling out off-price chains as the clearest defensive plays while traditional apparel firms may come under the sharpest strain.

In a note distributed Thursday, analyst Adrienne Yih observed that, to date, consumer spending has shown resilience - inventories are relatively clean, promotional activity is being managed and tax refunds are propping up demand. Even so, Barclays warns that oil shocks have a broader effect than just curbing consumer purchases.

"Oil shocks can severely damage retail profitability as their impact is felt throughout the P&L, not only from consumer demand destruction, but also from pressure on input costs and operating costs," the note says. That framework leads Barclays to identify The TJX Companies, Ross Stores and Burlington as the most defensive retail exposures in such an environment.

Barclays argues that off-price retail "most cleanly fits this profile and offers investors discretionary exposure while managing volatility and drawdown risk." The bank characterizes an oil shock as "a de facto regressive tax" that falls disproportionately on lower- and middle-income households, encouraging trade-down behavior that structurally benefits off-price models.

Beyond off-price operators, Barclays also points to recurring-consumption retailers such as Ulta Beauty and National Vision as relatively resilient. The bank reasons that certain categories are replenishment-driven - consumers effectively must replace products in those categories regardless of broader macroeconomic stress.

On the flip side, Barclays flags traditional apparel as particularly vulnerable. The firm cites factors such as low barriers to entry, limited brand loyalty and an abundance of substitutes as features that reduce pricing power for many apparel merchants. By contrast, accessories and footwear businesses with stronger brand equity tend to retain customers and prove stickier through downturns.

Framing the consumer cyclicals landscape, Barclays describes the sector as "first out, first in" - among the first to pull back when a slowdown begins but also among the first to rebound. As a result, the bank says the duration of the Middle East conflict will be a key variable for investors monitoring retail exposure.


Companies highlighted: TJX, Ross Stores, Burlington, Ulta Beauty, National Vision.

Risks

  • An extended Middle East conflict could prolong elevated oil prices, increasing input costs and operating expenses across retail and compressing margins - impact is especially relevant for apparel and retailers with limited pricing power.
  • Trade-down behavior driven by higher fuel costs and a regressive effect on lower- and middle-income consumers could shift spending toward off-price formats, pressuring full-price apparel and merchants reliant on brand loyalty.
  • Uncertainty over the duration of the shock creates volatility for consumer cyclicals, which are typically the first sector to exit during slowdowns and among the first to recover; investors face timing risk tied to conflict length.

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