The US consumer confidence for the month of October (1st release) just released by the University of Michigan came in better than expected at 59.8 points (forecast 59; previous month was 58.6).
The assessment of the current situation is 65.3 (previous month was 59.7)
Consumer expectation is 56.2 (previous month was 58.0)
Inflation expectations:
1 year: 5.1% (previous month was 5.7%)
5 years: 2.9% (previous month was 2.7%)
Joanne Hsu, who is responsible for the survey:
Consumer sentiment is essentially unchanged at 1.2 index points above September, in spite of a 23% improvement in current buying conditions for durables owing to an easing in supply constraints. Sentiment is now 9.8 points above the all-time low reached in June, but this improvement remains tentative, as the expectations index declined by 3% from last month. Continued uncertainty over the future trajectory of prices, economies, and financial markets around the world indicate a bumpy road ahead for consumers.
The median expected year-ahead inflation rate rose to 5.1%, with increases reported across age, income, and education. Last month, long run inflation expectations fell below the narrow 2.9-3.1% range for the first time since July 2021, but since then expectations have returned to that range at 2.9%. After 3 months of expecting minimal increases in gas prices in the year ahead, both short and longer run expectations rebounded in October.
source: tradingeconomics.com
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