| Consumer Confidence | |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
Highlights
Consumer confidence eased in April but still remains over the key 80 level, at 82.3 in April vs March's upwardly revised 83.9. These readings are the highest of the recovery and follow five straight prior readings under 80. But there is bad news in the April report and that is the present situation component which fell under 80, to 78.3 and sizably below March's 82.5. This comparison points to weakness for month-to-month consumer sector readings for April including for job readings as the jobs-hard-to-get subcomponent rose a sharp 1.1 percentage points to 32.5 percent. And the jobs plentiful reading is down, to 12.9 percent vs 13.8 percent in March. The good news in the report is the expectations component which is steady and solid at 84.9 vs 84.8 in March. Those seeing more jobs opening up in the months ahead are up, to 15.0 percent vs March's 14.1 percent, as are those seeing their income going up, to 17.1 percent from 15.3 percent. Nevertheless, those seeing their own income falling rose to 12.9 percent from 11.5 percent. Gas and food prices have been on the climb but have yet to affect inflation expectations which, like they were in last week's consumer sentiment report, are unchanged, at 5.5 percent for this report. This report is showing less strength this month in consumer spirits than other readings though the results are still respectable. Yet the decline in the current conditions component is a concern. The Dow is moving off opening highs following today's report. | |||||||||||||||
Market Consensus before announcement
The Conference Board's consumer confidence index rose to 82.3 in March versus a revised 78.3 in February. The gain was led by strong showings in two subcomponents, expectations for future business conditions and, importantly, expectations for future employment. But the assessment of current conditions actually was down a bit including the very closely watched jobs-hard-to-get subcomponent which rose 6 tenths to 33.0 percent.
Source: Bloomberg
| |||||||||||||||
Give a more longer term perspective of Economic trends and the Macroeconomic and Monetary Interdependence of the Global Economy. With the Background of this approach the blog will deal with the implications for Investment decisions. The author believes that China and the Asia Pacific Region are and will be the powerhouse for the global economic growth for years to come. It will also cover IT because of its momentum driver for economic growth.
Tuesday, 29 April 2014
U.S. Consumer Confidence eases to 82.3 in April
Popular Posts
-
Not everyone's blood clots at the same rate. While that might seem like simply an interesting bit of trivia, it's anything but t...
-
"Global financial markets were stunned when the US Federal Reserve announced on September 18, that it was not ready to begin the wi...
-
China criticized Japan on Monday for repeatedly making provocative remarks and accused Japan of breaking the status quo on the Diaoyu Isla...
-
Copper dropped to a one-month low on Friday and was on track for its biggest weekly fall in nearly three months as an investigation into m...
-
"As 2013 comes to an end, it looks like the world economy will remain stuck in low gear. For those reading the tea leaves of global re...
-
As the global population continues to grow and developing countries emerge from poverty, freshwater is at risk of becoming one of the Eart...
-
China Shenhua Energy, the country's largest coal producer, posted a decline in first-quarter net profit compared with a year earlier, ...
-
Steep weekly falls on Wall Street pressured Asian shares on Monday, as concerns over geopolitical tensions and Argentina's debt defaul...
-
A new chapter in the North American oil revolution is about to open on the Texas coast, with two major pipelines poised this summer to del...
-
Hong Kong's customs authority on Wednesday revealed that it had detected a total of 282 smuggling cases in 2013, an increase of abou...