Summary
- Decline moves to roughly two-year low.
- Present situations and expected conditions decline.
- Inflation expectations remain steady.
The Conference Board’s Index of Consumer Confidence declined 5.9% (-6.5% y/y) to 97.0 during April following a 1.6% March drop, revised from a 0.1% slip. A reading of 104.0 had been expected in the Action Economics Forecast Survey. These declines came after a 5.5% February fall and a 2.7% January rise. The latest level remains well below the high of 137.9 in October 2018.
The Present Situations Index fell 2.7% (-5.9% y/y) this month to 142.9 following a 0.5% March slip and February’s 4.7% decline. The Expectations Index fell 10.3% (-7.4% y/y) to 66.4, the lowest point since July 2022, after falling 3.0% in March and 6.4% in February.
An improved 20.6% of respondents characterized current business conditions as good in April, remaining below its high of 23.4% in June. Labor market readings deteriorated this month. The jobs gap, representing the difference between respondents indicating that jobs are plentiful and those saying jobs are hard to get, fell to 25.3% from 29.5% in March. The reading remained below the March 2022 high of 47.1%. Calculated by Haver Analytics, this series has a 64% correlation with the unemployment rate over the last ten years. The jobs plentiful measure fell to 40.2% from 41.7% and remained below the March 2022 high of 56.7%. The jobs hard-to-get measure of 14.9% compared to 12.2% in March and a recent high of 15.6% in October. The jobs not-so-plentiful reading fell to 44.9% from 46.1% in March and remained well above its 30.5% low in September 2021.
In April, a greatly lessened 12.8% of consumers believed that business conditions in six months would improve and a higher percentage of 19.9% believed they would worsen. A lessened 11.7% of respondents felt there would be more jobs in six months, down from a high of 41.2% in April 2020. This remains below a recent high of 20.0% in December of 2022. A lessened 15.4% expected income to increase in six months, down from 18.3% in December and below a high of 19.6% in October of 2022.
The expected inflation rate in twelve months of 5.3% compared to 5.3% in March. It remained below the 7.9% high in June 2022, but above the 4.4% low in January 2020.
A steady 53.8% of respondents felt that interest rates would be higher in twelve months, up from a low of 42.1% in January. A diminished 20.5% thought they would be lower. A lessened 46.3% of respondents believed that stock prices would be higher in twelve months. Roughly 27% thought stock prices would be lower in twelve months versus a high of 44.7% in July of 2022. The share of respondents planning to buy a home within six months declined to 4.9% from 5.2% and remained below the October 2022 high of 7.4%. The percentage of respondents planning to buy a major appliance fell sharply m/m to 41.2% and remained below a high of 52.4% in October 2022.
The Consumer Confidence data are available in Haver’s CBDB database. The total indexes, which are indexed to 1985=100, appear in USECON, and market expectations are in AS1REPNA.
How Do Households Respond to Income Shocks? from the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis is available here.
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