The Welland Tribune

Despite job security worries, optimism is up

Consumer confidence inches higher — except where housing concerned

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS

Consumer confidence continues to show signs of improving in Canada, inching higher for a fourth straight week.

The Bloomberg Nanos Canadian Confidence Index, based on a random survey, ticked up slightly to 39.3 last week. While the index remains near its worst-ever readings recorded last month, the rise in confidence in recent weeks suggests negative sentiment may be finding a floor amid talk of reopening the economy.

Sentiment around housing, however, remains at near-record lows.

Every week, Nanos Research surveys 250 Canadians for their views on personal finances, job security and their outlook for the economy and real estate prices. Bloomberg publishes four-week rolling averages of the 1,000 responses.

The polling suggests the mood is still dire, but with improvemen­ts on most questions.

Regionally, the gains in sentiment have been mostly in Western Canada, aided by a recent rebound in oil prices and relatively fewer coronaviru­s cases — British Columbia, for example, has one of the lowest death rates in North America.

Confidence in Ontario and Quebec remain at near record lows.

The share of Canadians who say their personal finances have worsened over the past year dropped to 36.7 per cent, from as high as 42.3 per cent last month. That’s still about 10 percentage points above the average for this question over the past five years.

Canadians remain sour about the country’s economic outlook, but are less pessimisti­c than they were a few weeks ago. About 73 per cent of respondent­s believe the economy will worsen, down from 80 per cent last month.

About one in five Canadians remains worried about job security, about double the historical average for the question. That’s down from a peak of about 25 per cent a few weeks ago.

Housing is an outlier. Even as sentiment has improved around the economic outlook and personal finances, expectatio­ns around real estate are weakening.

Over the past two weeks, almost half of respondent­s anticipate a drop in home prices, which is a record and about three times above the average for this question.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE
THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? A woman checks out a jobs advertisem­ent sign in Toronto. Students are starting to look for summer work, but they’re finding few options in the usual places.
NATHAN DENETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS A woman checks out a jobs advertisem­ent sign in Toronto. Students are starting to look for summer work, but they’re finding few options in the usual places.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada