American consumer confidence has shown a dramatic deterioration in recent weeks, with multiple gauges pointing to heightened economic anxiety among households. The Conference Board’s latest reading reveals a troubling picture of consumer sentiment heading into the year-end.
The Conference Board reported its consumer confidence index plummeting to 88.7 in November, a substantial decline from October’s revised figure of 95.5. This miss significantly undershot economist expectations of 93.3, signaling a sharper than anticipated pullback in consumer optimism. Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist at The Conference Board, characterized the deterioration as striking: “Consumer confidence tumbled in November to its second lowest level since April after moving sideways for several months. All five components of the overall index flagged or remained weak.”
What’s particularly concerning is the steep erosion in the expectations index, which cratered to 63.2 from 71.8 month-over-month. More alarming still, The Conference Board noted this forward-looking measure has remained below the 80 threshold for ten consecutive months—a warning signal historically associated with recession risk ahead.
The present situation index similarly deteriorated, dropping to 126.9 from 131.2 as consumers grew more pessimistic about immediate business conditions and employment prospects. Consumer commentary painted an increasingly gloomy picture, with persistent concerns about prices and inflation, tariffs and trade complexities, political uncertainty, and the federal government shutdown taking center stage. Labor market references also remained elevated among consumer concerns, though mentions eased slightly from prior months.
The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index corroborates this downward trend. Though the November reading was upwardly revised to 51.0 from an initial 50.3—better than the 50.5 economists anticipated—sentiment still deteriorated relative to October’s 53.6 and remains near historically depressed levels last seen in June 2022. The revision partly reflected some relief following the government shutdown resolution, yet this modest bounce masks underlying weakness in consumer psychology.
The convergence of deteriorating readings across both major consumer confidence measures underscores a market increasingly burdened by uncertainty and economic headwinds. With expectations indices signaling recession caution and consumer sentiment hovering near multi-year lows, these data points demand close monitoring in the months ahead.
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U.S. Consumer Confidence Deteriorates Sharply in November as Economic Anxiety Mounts
American consumer confidence has shown a dramatic deterioration in recent weeks, with multiple gauges pointing to heightened economic anxiety among households. The Conference Board’s latest reading reveals a troubling picture of consumer sentiment heading into the year-end.
The Conference Board reported its consumer confidence index plummeting to 88.7 in November, a substantial decline from October’s revised figure of 95.5. This miss significantly undershot economist expectations of 93.3, signaling a sharper than anticipated pullback in consumer optimism. Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist at The Conference Board, characterized the deterioration as striking: “Consumer confidence tumbled in November to its second lowest level since April after moving sideways for several months. All five components of the overall index flagged or remained weak.”
What’s particularly concerning is the steep erosion in the expectations index, which cratered to 63.2 from 71.8 month-over-month. More alarming still, The Conference Board noted this forward-looking measure has remained below the 80 threshold for ten consecutive months—a warning signal historically associated with recession risk ahead.
The present situation index similarly deteriorated, dropping to 126.9 from 131.2 as consumers grew more pessimistic about immediate business conditions and employment prospects. Consumer commentary painted an increasingly gloomy picture, with persistent concerns about prices and inflation, tariffs and trade complexities, political uncertainty, and the federal government shutdown taking center stage. Labor market references also remained elevated among consumer concerns, though mentions eased slightly from prior months.
The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index corroborates this downward trend. Though the November reading was upwardly revised to 51.0 from an initial 50.3—better than the 50.5 economists anticipated—sentiment still deteriorated relative to October’s 53.6 and remains near historically depressed levels last seen in June 2022. The revision partly reflected some relief following the government shutdown resolution, yet this modest bounce masks underlying weakness in consumer psychology.
The convergence of deteriorating readings across both major consumer confidence measures underscores a market increasingly burdened by uncertainty and economic headwinds. With expectations indices signaling recession caution and consumer sentiment hovering near multi-year lows, these data points demand close monitoring in the months ahead.