Muscat Daily

US consumer sentiment shows biggest drop in nearly 3 years

- Terry Lane (Source: Investoped­ia.com)

US consumer sentiment fell sharply in May, bringing the Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index to its lowest level in six months. The closely watched index dropped nearly 10 points from the last reading in April to 67.4, the lowest since November.

The drop comes after the survey of consumer optimism had moved within a three-point range over the previous four months.

It is the largest decline in the index in about three years, and fell far short of the 76.0 reading that economists surveyed by the Wall Street Journal and Dow Jones Newswires expected.

“While consumers had been reserving judgment for the past few months, they now perceive negative developmen­ts on a number of dimensions. They expressed worries that inflation, unemployme­nt and interest rates may all be moving in an unfavorabl­e direction in the year ahead,” said survey director Joanne Hsu.

The survey showed similar declines when consumers were asked about their current economic conditions and on their expectatio­ns of future business conditions.

Consumers said they see inflation getting worse over the next year, anticipati­ng an inflation rate of 3.5%, up from 3.2% in last month’s survey and above the average range seen prior to the pandemic.

The survey also showed that consumers’ long-range inflation expectatio­ns of five years ahead ticked higher, remaining well above the pre-pandemic range. The worsening sentiment on price pressures come as inflation readings have continued to move higher in 2024.

Consumer inflation expectatio­ns are an important gauge for Federal Reserve officials, who closely watch survey results for indication­s if consumer behavior will lead to higher prices. Fed officials have said repeatedly that the central bank won't be in a position to consider cuts to the benchmark interest rate until inflation is under control.

Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial, said that uncertaint­y about inflation could affect consumer spending levels, which are a significan­t contributo­r to US economic growth. The most recent retail sales report showed that consumers continued to surprise with their spending levels, though some interest-ratesensit­ive categories moved lower, including automobile­s and furniture.

“Most consumers have pivoted away from big-ticket buying plans, confirming what we saw from the Conference Board earlier this month” Roach said. “As of this month, most consumers believe now is a poor time to buy a vehicle or a home. These changes in buying plans could have knock-on effects in other categories of spending.”

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