KEY POINTS
  • The Supreme Court's decision to strike down student loan forgiveness will become the latest challenge for retailers coping with more cautious consumers.
  • Student loan payments will also restart this fall after a Covid pandemic-related pause.
  • Investors say retailers that sell discretionary merchandise, such as clothing and electronics, are the most vulnerable.
A shopper goes through shirts in the kids section at Old Navy in Denver, Colorado.

By striking down student debt forgiveness Friday, the U.S. Supreme Court not only added a hefty expense back into millions of Americans' budgets. It also created the latest challenge for retailers already struggling to predict how consumers may spend in the coming months.

The court's decision squashed President Joe Biden's plan to forgive up to $20,000 per borrower in federal student loan debt. Student loans will already take a bigger bite out of budgets this fall as payments and interest accruals resume after a more than three-year pandemic-related pause. Biden announced steps Friday to make the transition to resuming payments easier and create a path to forgiveness of some loans.