Jim LaPointe knows that how the economy feels «depends on your perspective.»
Four years after Covid-19 lockdowns kicked off a home fix-up frenzy, the central New Jersey contractor's business remains through the roof. While Home Depot said earlier this month that customers are increasingly holding off on big projects, LaPointe is seeing the opposite. He's been turning some clients away to avoid being «booked up a year in advance.»
«They're going nuts with this,» he said of homeowners' appetite for renovations.
It wasn't long ago when a stock market smashing records and unemployment at decadeslong lows were huge advantages for an incumbent president. But today, with voters heading to the polls in little more than five months, it's less clear what role the economy will play in an electorate that's also fractured by immigration and abortion rights.
More from NBC News:
The rise of 'abortion abolitionists' targeting women, doctors and Donald Trump
Florida to allow doctors to perform C-sections outside hospitals
Harrison Butker says he has no regrets after controversial commencement speech
An NBC News poll last month found cost-of-living concerns remain top of mind for voters. While presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump is seen — by a 52% to 30% margin — as better positioned to tackle inflation than his Democratic rival, President Joe Biden, 1 in 4 voters have yet to make up their minds about the race.
«We're getting close to the period, usually in the summer, when public attitudes on the economy traditionally harden,» said Greg Valliere, chief U.S. policy strategist at AGF Investments, who so far sees Biden as «the clear underdog.»
The Biden campaign, which rejects that view, has been ramping up its economic
Read more on cnbc.com