US Conf. Board Consumer Confidence Feb: 91.3 (est 90.0; prev r 88.9)

 US Conf. Board Consumer Confidence Feb: 91.3 (est 90.0; prev r 88.9)

- Present Situation Feb: 92.0 (prev r 85.5) - Expectations Feb: 90.8 (prev r 91.2)



Consumer confidence ticked up a bit this month due to increase in present situation but expectations fell a touch and we remain far from pre-pandemic levels.  Cutoff date was Feb 11.  h/t to Schwab for the charts.

CB does a good job of breaking it down:

“After three months of consecutive declines in the Present Situation Index, consumers’ assessment of current conditions improved in February,” said Lynn Franco, Senior Director of Economic Indicators at The Conference Board. “This course reversal suggests economic growth has not slowed further. While the Expectations Index fell marginally in February, consumers remain cautiously optimistic, on the whole, about the outlook for the coming months. Notably, vacation intentions—particularly, plans to travel outside the U.S. and via air—saw an uptick this month, and are poised to improve further as vaccination efforts expand.”

Consumers’ assessment of current conditions improved in February. The percentage of consumers claiming business conditions are “good” increased from 15.8 percent to 16.5 percent, while the proportion claiming business conditions are “bad” fell from 42.4 percent to 39.9 percent. Consumers’ assessment of the labor market also improved. The percentage of consumers saying jobs are “plentiful” increased from 20.0 percent to 21.9 percent, while those claiming jobs are “hard to get” declined from 22.5 percent to 21.2 percent.

Consumers, however, were marginally less optimistic about the short-term outlook in February. The percentage of consumers expecting business conditions will improve over the next six months fell from 34.1 percent to 31.0 percent; however, the proportion expecting business conditions will worsen also declined, from 19.0 percent to 17.7 percent. Likewise, consumers’ outlook regarding the job market was somewhat mixed. The proportion expecting more jobs in the months ahead decreased from 30.4 percent to 26.1 percent; however, those anticipating fewer jobs also declined, from 22.1 percent to 20.6 percent. Regarding short-term income prospects, 15.2 percent of consumers expect their incomes to increase in the next six months, down slightly from 15.8 percent in January. Conversely, 13.2 percent expect their incomes to decrease, down from 15.5 percent last month.



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Neil's Morning Update - 12/27/21

US New Homes Sales Nov: 744K (est 770K; prev 745K; prevR 662K) - New home sales come in under expectations due to huge October revisions

Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey: +9 vs. +25 consensus and +27.3 prior - Dallas Fed Mfg comes in well below expectations as supply chains and prices constrain new orders and shipments