Consumer sentiment was even worse than expected in April, and was closely watched on Friday as the expected inflation levels since 1981 reached its highest level of expected inflation, according to a University of Michigan survey.
The survey’s mid-month reading on consumer sentiment fell to 50.8, below the Dow Jones Consensus estimate of 54.6, from 57.0 in March. The move represents a monthly change of 10.9%, 34.2% lower than a year ago. This was the lowest reading since June 2022 and the second lowest in the history of research dating back to 1952.
As emotions went low, concerns about inflation skyrocketed.
Respondents’ expectations for future inflation were the highest since November 1981, rising from 5% in March. On the five-year horizon, forecasts rose to 4.4%, up 0.3 points from March, the highest since June 1991.
Other measures in the investigation also showed degradation.
The current economic situation index fell to 56.5, a 11.4% decrease from March, but the forecasted measurement fell to 47.2, falling by 10.3% since May 1980.
Following the report, the stocks became negative and the Treasury was added to the profits.
“Consumers spiraled into something petrified out of anxiety,” writes Samuel Toums, a US economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.
According to Joanne Hsu, director of the study, the decline in sentiment encountered all demographics, including age, income and political affiliation.
“Consumers have reported multiple warning signs that increase the risk of a recession. Business conditions, personal finances, income, inflation and labour market expectations continued to deteriorate this month,” HSU said.
In addition to other measurements, the survey showed that the fear of unemployment has risen to the highest since 2009.
The investigation comes amid concerns that President Donald Trump’s tariffs will increase inflation and slow growth, with some prominent Wall Street executives and economists hoping that the US will fall into a recession over the next year.
Certainly, survey measures generally go against market-based expectations, so there is little concern about future inflation. But recent Federal Reserve officials say they fear that consumer expectations could soon become a reality if behavior changes. This week’s consumer and producer inflation measurements showed price pressures eased in March.
The University of Michigan survey also included responses from March 25th to April 8th. This is the end of the day before Trump announced his 90-day stay on aggressive tariffs on dozens of US trading partners.
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