Edmonton Journal

Consumer sentiment in U.S. approaches 11-year low: survey

Inflation jitters cloud outlook even amid strength in spending and labour market

- LUCIA MUTIKANI

U.S. consumer sentiment slumped to its lowest level in nearly 11 years in early May as worries about inflation persisted, but household spending remains underpinne­d by a strong labour market and massive savings, which should keep the economy expanding.

The University of Michigan's survey on Friday showed the deteriorat­ion in sentiment, which some economists said pushed it into recessiona­ry territory, was across all demographi­cs, as well as geographic­al and political affiliatio­n. Gasoline prices and the stock market have a heavy weighting in the survey.

Gasoline prices resumed their upward trend this month, setting an average record high of US$4.432 per gallon on Friday, according to AAA. Fears that the Federal Reserve will have to aggressive­ly tighten monetary policy to bring down inflation have unleashed a massive equities sell-off on Wall Street.

“But confidence has been a poor guide to consumptio­n growth in recent years, so we would not read too much into that signal,” said Michael Pearce, a senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics in New York. “Just because consumers resent paying higher prices and are suffering limited availabili­ty doesn't mean they aren't still making those purchases.”

The University of Michigan's preliminar­y consumer sentiment index tumbled 9.4 per cent to 59.1 early this month, the lowest reading since August 2011. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index dipping to 64. The sharp decline is in stark contrast with the Conference Board's consumer confidence survey, whose index remains well above the COVID -19 pandemic lows.

The Conference Board survey places more emphasis on the labour market, which is generating jobs at a brisk clip. Wages are also rising as employers scramble to fill a record 11.5 million job openings as of the end of March.

The University of Michigan survey's gauge of current economic conditions dropped 8.4 per cent to 63.6. That was the lowest reading since 2013, and 36 per cent of consumers attributed their negative assessment to inflation. Its measure of consumer expectatio­ns declined 9.9 per cent to 56.3.

Consumers viewed buying conditions for long-lasting manufactur­ed goods as the worst since the survey started tracking the series in 1978. Economists were unfazed, noting that consumers were sitting on at least US$2 trillion in excess savings accumulate­d during the pandemic.

“But consumer spending keeps rising, and with savings high, household debt low and the jobs market strong, that spending should continue until the economy falters,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union in Vienna, Va.

Even as consumers stressed about high prices, long-term inflation expectatio­ns appeared to be well anchored. The survey's one-year inflation expectatio­ns were at 5.4 per cent for the third straight month. Its five-year inflation expectatio­ns were unchanged at three per cent for the fourth consecutiv­e month.

There have been worries that high inflation and the Fed's interest rate hikes, which started in March, could abruptly slow growth or even tip the economy into recession. The economy contracted in the first quarter under the weight of a record trade deficit, but domestic demand remained solid.

Though inflation is likely to remain elevated, signs are growing that price pressures have peaked.

A separate report from the Labor Department showed import prices were unexpected­ly flat in April as a decline in the cost of petroleum offset gains in food and other products. Import prices had surged 2.9 per cent in March.

Economists had forecast import prices, which exclude tariffs, would climb 0.6 per cent. In the 12 months through April, import prices rose 12 per cent after accelerati­ng 13 per cent in the year through March.

Government data this week showed monthly consumer prices increased at the slowest pace in eight months, while the gain in producer prices was the smallest since last September.

With oil prices drifting higher in May, monthly import, consumer and producer prices are likely to pick up.

Annual inflation rates are expected to continue edging lower, though likely to stay above the Fed's two-per-cent target.

 ?? DAVID PAUL MORRIS/BLOOMBERG ?? A University of Michigan poll shows a deteriorat­ion in consumer sentiment across all demographi­cs, and geographic­al and political affiliatio­n, though spending is forecast to stay strong.
DAVID PAUL MORRIS/BLOOMBERG A University of Michigan poll shows a deteriorat­ion in consumer sentiment across all demographi­cs, and geographic­al and political affiliatio­n, though spending is forecast to stay strong.

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