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.
Housing transaction volume posted one of its weakest January readings in years, consumer purchase expectations have fallen below levels historically associated with recession risk, and household purchasing power is being eroded by tariff-driven cost increases. According to traditional leading indicators, a pullback is underway.
At the same time, the channel is behaving differently. Serious buyers wrote orders at Las Vegas Winter Market. Lightovation reported its strongest attendance in multiple years.
Existing Home Sales Drop 8.4%
Home sales fell sharply in January 2026, constrained by mortgage lock-in. Most homeowners with low pandemic-era rates are staying put rather than selling. Demand has shifted toward room-specific upgrades rather than full-home furnishing tied to relocation.
Why it matters:
- The lock-in effect is structural, improving affordability and rising inventory create a setup for a potential second-half recovery, but the first half is tracking soft for any brand whose demand model is anchored to residential turnover.
- The remodel and refresh cycle is absorbing displaced demand; homeowners who are not moving are investing in the spaces they occupy, which changes which categories, SKUs, and channel partners are relevant.
Sources: National Association of Realtors, Realtor.com Economic Research, NAR Economists’ Outlook, Bankrate
Consumer Expectations Fall While Sentiment Rises
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index fell to 84.5 in January 2026, its lowest reading since May 2014 and below the lows recorded during the early pandemic period. Where retailers are posting gains, it's largely driven by promotions, not organic growth.
Why it matters:
- Middle-market consumers are pulling back on planned major purchases, including furniture.
- Promotion-driven growth compresses dealer margins and increases reliance on brand-level support to maintain floor presence.
- Premium and value segments are now operating in structurally different demand environments.
Sources: The Conference Board, University of Michigan / Trading Economics, Furniture Today
Las Vegas Winter Market
Las Vegas Winter Market (January 25-29, 2026) continued a multi-year trend of declining overall foot traffic. Matrix Furniture Group opened 192 new accounts over four days and reported performance approximately 30% stronger than High Point Market. Key accounts that hadn't attended in years returned and wrote orders. ANDMORE described engagement as strong despite the lower headcount.
Fewer attendees, but higher order and account velocity. The show is delivering value differently than it used to.
Why it matters:
- ROI per attendee has increased. Headcount is a less useful metric than buyer intent.
- Follow-up speed on samples, pricing, and lead times will determine whether market momentum converts to revenue.
- Brands that scaled back their presence may have missed a high-quality account acquisition window.
Sources: ANDMORE, Furniture Today, HFB Business
Chinese Furniture Tariffs Reach ~130%
Reshoring sounds like the logical response, but domestic capacity isn't ready. Labor shortages are widespread, and building new production takes two to three years minimum, pushing real capacity to 2028 at the earliest. Ocean freight costs have dropped, but domestic LTL surcharges are offsetting much of that savings. Total landed cost is higher than headline rates suggest.
Why it matters:
- Reshoring is not a near-term fix. Plans built on that assumption are working from the wrong timeline.
- The true cost-of-goods picture for imported products has shifted materially.
- Sourcing diversification into Vietnam, India, or Mexico is the practical path forward, but requires 12–24 months to execute reliably.
Sources: Furniture Today, Home News Now, MoverDB, ParcelPath, The Furnishing Report
Lightovation Posts 25% Attendance Increase
Lightovation at Dallas Market Center posted a 25% increase in attendance in January 2026. Growth was concentrated in exterior lighting, kitchen, and bath. This stands out given soft traffic trends across broader home furnishings. Lutron Electronics also acquired Tanury Industries to expand into premium metal finishes.
Why it matters:
- Attendance at a category-specific show signals active specification activity. These buyers are in project pipelines, not browsing.
- Growth in exterior lighting and kitchen and bath mirrors the remodel cycle, confirming where demand is actually flowing.
- Lutron's acquisition reflects institutional confidence in the category during a soft macro period.
Sources: Home Accents Today
Designers Expanding Into Hospitality and Multifamily
Leading designers are moving into hospitality, multifamily, and out-of-state projects, focusing on fewer, larger, longer-duration engagements rather than growing client counts. AI tools and international talent are active investments. Hubbardton Forge responded by expanding its Design Advisory Council with five designers across key markets to directly shape product and specification strategy.
Why it matters:
- Hospitality and multifamily projects operate at a different scale than residential work. Trade programs built for residential use may not serve this demand.
- Fewer projects per designer means fewer brand decisions per year, with higher stakes each time.
- Brands already embedded in a designer's workflow hold a significant advantage. Designers are deepening existing relationships, not shopping for new ones. The window for new brand introductions is narrowing.
Sources: Business of Home, Home Accents Today
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