The Columbus Dispatch

US consumer sentiment rises while tariffs weigh on outlook

- By Reade Pickert

U.S. consumer sentiment rose this month amid morefavora­ble personal finances, while tariffs weighed on Americans’ optimism for the economy and helped boost inflation expectatio­ns to a three- year high, according to a University of Michigan report Friday.

• The sentiment index rose to 99.3 ( est. 98.5) from 98 in May

• The current conditions gauge, which measures Americans’ perception­s of their finances, advanced to 117.9, second- highest reading since 2000, from 111.8

• The expectatio­ns measure decreased to 87.4, a five-month low, from 89.1

• The consumers saw inflation rate in the next year at 2.9%, highest since March 2015, after 2.8%

The report showed a divergence in sentiment about the present and the future, with a near- record number of households mentioning recent income gains and contrastin­g with a pickup in inflation expectatio­ns. The economic outlook was “much more negative” among respondent­s who unfavorabl­y mentioned the new tariffs, as the Trump administra­tion imposed tariffs.

Even so, sentiment remains near the high for this expansion, as a tight labor market and historical­ly low unemployme­nt levels continue to buoy the U.S. economy. That should help drive continued gains in consumer spending, the biggest part of the U. S. economy.

Respondent­s anticipate­d an annual gain of 2.5 percent in household incomes, the highest since 2008 and up from 1.6 percent in May, the report showed. Almost all of the June gain came from people in the bottom two- thirds of incomes, reflecting job gains across the population.

“Consumers see the tariffs negatively affecting business prospects,” Richard Curtin, director of the University of Michigan consumer survey, said on a conference call. “But it did not affect the five- year business outlook. Only it was concentrat­ed on the one- year business outlook as though consumers expect this kerfuffle about trade to be over shortly and not lead to a long- lasting trade war.”

• Among respondent­s, 29 percent expected unemployme­nt rate to decline in the year ahead, while 23 percent saw an increase and 48 percent expected no change

• The inflation rate over next five to 10 years was seen at 2.6 percent, highest since July, following five months at 2.5 percent

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