Consumer confidence was low in September ahead of the blackouts of expected data caused by the looming federal shutdown, it reported Tuesday.
The board’s headline confidence index is 94.2 points off the reading of 94.2, below the Dow Jones estimate of 96.0. Reading is the lowest since April and comes with a government non-essential operation that is not scheduled to be closed in the middle of the night.
In addition to the weaknesses of the main reading, the “Current Situation” index reached its lowest in a year.
“While the ratings of consumer business conditions have been far less positive than in recent months, current employment availability ratings have declined for nine months to reach new multi-year lows,” said Stephanie Gichard, senior economist at Global Indicators.
The labour market has shown considerable weakness this year, but employment availability in August was slightly better than the previous month.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said it could be the last data release until the expenditure stall on Capitol Hill is resolved. The job openings totaled 723 million, an increase of 19,000 from July, but said it had risen 422,000 or 5.5% from the previous year.
The bureau’s job openings and labor sales reports, which are closely monitored by Federal Reserve officials to measure slack in the labour market, showed a slow pace in both employment and complete separation. QUITS has dropped 75,000 in a category considered a measure of workers’ confidence in finding new jobs after leaving their current job.
Labor market stability is an important consideration for the Fed as authorities consider the next move in interest rates. The market widely expects central banks to cut their benchmark borrowing rate by half points by the end of the year, cutting its October and December meetings.
“My baseline outlook is not seeing any more softer the labor market, but there are risks,” Boston Fed President Susan Collins said Tuesday. “We believe that the risk that labor demand could be significantly short of supply could be increased, leading to a more meaningful and unwelcome increase in unemployment.”
If the spending impasse is resolved by Friday, BLS is expected to show payroll growth of 51,000 in September, with just 22,000 in August.
The conference committee’s report showed growing disparities in perception of the labor market.
The share of respondents, which showed employment was “abundance” declined to 26.9%, above 3% points since August, but the “hard to get” gauge was held flat at 19.1%.
The survey also saw the biggest decline in the month since the question was asked in July 2022, which led to an increase in financial pessimism.