National Post

Consumer confidence stabilizes, U.S. Conference Board says

- Lucia Mutikani

• U. S. consumer confidence nudged up in May, suggesting the worst of the novel coronaviru­s-driven economic slump was likely in the past as the country starts to reopen, but it could take a while for the economy to dig out of its hole amid record unemployme­nt.

Signs the downturn could be close to bottoming were bolstered by other data on Tuesday showing the pace of decline in manufactur­ing activity in Texas and services industry contractio­n in the mid- Atlantic region easing this month.

“The worst may be over for the economy,” said Chris Rupkey, chief economist at MUFG in New York. “We still can’t see a V-shaped recovery, but at least this is looking like the shortest recession in history which will be measured in months not years.”

The Conference Board said its consumer confidence index edged up to a reading of 86.6 this month from a downwardly revised 85.7 in April. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index rising to 87.5 in May from the previously reported reading of 86.9 in April.

Businesses across the country are opening doors after shuttering in midMarch as states and local government­s took drastic measures to slow the spread of COVID- 19, the respirator­y illness caused by the virus, almost grounding the country to a halt. The economy contracted at its deepest pace in the first quarter since the Great Recession and lost at least 21.4 million jobs in March and April.

Recessions in the U. S. are called by the National Bureau of Economic Research, which does not define a recession as two- consecutiv­e quarters of decline in real gross domestic product, as is the rule of thumb in many countries. Instead, the NBER looks for a drop in economic activity, spread across the economy and lasting more than a few months. Economists believe the economy slipped into recession in March.

The Conference Board survey’s present situation measure, based on consumers’ assessment of current business and labour market conditions, fell to a reading of 71.1 this month from 73.0 in April. This gauge has declined by nearly 100 points in the last couple of months, underscori­ng the impact of COVID-19.

But the expectatio­ns index based on consumers’ shortterm outlook for income, business and labour market conditions climbed to 96.9 from 94.3 in April.

Despite the improvemen­t in expectatio­ns, households remained worried about their finances. They also anticipate­d higher inflation, which could lead to perception­s of reduced purchasing power and hurt the much- needed consumer spending.

The Conference Board’s so- called labour market differenti­al, derived from data on respondent­s’ views on whether jobs are plentiful or hard to get, improved to a reading of -10.4 in May from -15.7 in April.

That measure closely correlates to the unemployme­nt rate in the Labor Department’s employment report.

The percentage of consumers expecting an increase in income dropped to 14.0 per cent this month from 17.2 per cent April and the proportion anticipati­ng a drop fell to 15.0 per cent from 18.4 per cent.

The improvemen­t in the data tone was echoed by a survey from the Dallas Federal Reserve on Tuesday showing Texas factory activity falling again in May, but at a slower pace compared to April’s record plunge.

Similarly, services industries in the mid- Atlantic region reported a continued decrease in activity, but a pulling away from a historic slump in April.

 ?? Kevin Lamarque
/ Reuters files ?? “The worst may be over for the economy,” says one economist as businesses are starting
to reopen after being forced to close or adapt in mid-march due to lockdowns.
Kevin Lamarque / Reuters files “The worst may be over for the economy,” says one economist as businesses are starting to reopen after being forced to close or adapt in mid-march due to lockdowns.

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