US Consumer Sentiment Falls To Lowest Level Since July, Reinforcing US Dollar Weakness

A popular gauge of U.S. consumer attitudes fell in November, ending a three-month streak of recovery and retreating to its lowest level since July, a sign that Americans are starting to become increasingly more pessimistic about the economic outlook again.

According to preliminary results from the University of Michigan, its consumer sentiment index plunged to 54.7 from 59.9 in October against a backdrop of elevated inflation, rising rates, mounting recession risks, and political uncertainty. The median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg News poll called for a more modest pullback to 59.5.

For much of the year, the spike in consumer prices has been the main source of consternation for most households, as the rapidly growing cost of living has had a detrimental effect on real incomes. The trend appears to be improving thanks to the Fed's tightening measures, but the aggressive hiking cycle has increased the likelihood of a downturn, a situation that may dampen spending in the coming months.
 

Consumer Sentiment Chart

image1.png

Source: TradingEconomics

Delving into today’s data, the current economic conditions index plummeted to 57.8 from 65.6, while the expectations indicator fell to 52.7 from 56.2. For its part, one-year inflation expectations remained unchanged at 5.1%, but the five-year measure drifted upwards to 3.0% from 2.9%.

The US dollar, as measured by the DXY index, extended losses after the sentiment survey crossed the wires, but the move may be largely related to yesterday's CPI report. For context, October inflation data surprised to the downside by a wide margin, increasing the likelihood of a downshift in the pace of interest rate hikes by the Fed. This should be the main narrative in the near term, so the greenback could maintain a negative bias in the coming days.
 

US Dollar Index (DXY) Chart

(Click on image to enlarge)

Chart  Description automatically generated

Source: TradingView


More By This Author:

US Inflation Falls To 7.7% From 8.2%; What’s Ahead For The Fed And The US Dollar?
S&P 500 Sinks Ahead Of U.S. Inflation Data, Stock Market At Risk As Bitcoin Collapses
Euro’s Fate Hinges On US Inflation Data, Major Tech Levels To Watch On EUR/USD

Disclosure: See the full disclosure for DailyFX here.

How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Or Sign in with