‘Consumer confidence is starting to reflect the realities of governing, not the hopes that the swamp will be drained.’ – Joel Naroff, Naroff Economic Advisors
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index dropped more than experts estimated. In April, it lost 3.8% and reached 120.3, thus, marking the first decline since January. The fall was mainly attributable to the less optimistic view of business conditions and the labour market in the upcoming six months. As a result, the number of respondents, who evaluated business conditions as ‘good’, decreased from 32.4% to 30.2% and the share of those, who assessed the available number of jobs in the market as ‘plentiful’, plunged from 31.8% to 30.8%. In addition, the number of people who evaluated business conditions as ‘bad’ increased slightly from 13.1% to 13.8%. Yet, the share of consumers that believed jobs were ‘hard to get’ remained unchanged at 19.1%. The Conference Board’s data confirmed the view that in the short-run consumers would likely to limit their spending and put more emphasis on savings accumulation. Tuesday’s data also showed that the number of people, who thought that business conditions would worsen over the next six months, rose from 8.5% to 10.9%, while the share of those expecting weaker job creation surged from 12.7% to 13.1%. Nevertheless, the majority of respondents still believed that the economy would continue growing in the months ahead.