Consumers’ attitudes about both the present and the near future were once again bleak in April as tariffs ordered feelings and trust in employment that were last seen around the global financial crisis.
The Conference Committee’s Consumer Trust Index fell to 86 that month, down 7.9 points from previous readings, below the Dow Jones estimate of 87.7. It was the worst reading in nearly five years.
However, the view of the conditions has become even worse.
The board’s expectations index, which measures how respondents view the next six months, has been down 54.4 points and a 12.5 point lower since October 2011, to a lowest reading. Board officers said the reading coincided with the recession.
“The three expected components (business conditions, employment outlook, future revenue) all have deteriorated sharply and reflect broader pessimism about the future,” said Stephanie Gyad, senior economist at Global Indicators on the board.
Guichard added that the entire confidence survey is at “a level not seen since the onset of Covid Pandemic.”
In fact, the level of respondents hoping employment will decline over the next six months reached 32.1%. He added that this was “in the midst of a high recession as in April 2009.” The contraction continued from December 2007 to June 2009. Respondent levels saw the level considered “hard to get” rise to 16.6%, half as high since March, while those considered “abundant” fell from 33.6% to 31.7%.
The outlook for future income has also become negative for the first time in five years.
Downbeat views have expanded to the stock market, with 48.5% expected to be at a low price over the next 12 months, the worst reading since October 2011. Inflation expectations were the highest since November 2022 at 7% the following year.
It was fear of tariffs that drives pessimism, and it reached an all-time high for investigation. Hopes for the recession have also reached two years’ high.
Related data on Tuesday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that March employment posts had fallen to their lowest level since September 2024. The Job and Labor Revenue Survey showed a decline in positions of 7.48 million from 7.48 million in February, down from 7.5 million on Wall Street.
Government posts fell 59,000 amid President Donald Trump’s efforts to cut down the federal workforce. Transportation, warehouses and utilities also saw a decline of 59,000.
Jolts’ survey found that employment had little change during the layoffs fell by 222,000.