Subdued Confidence Points To Cooling US Consumer Spending

Time, Time Management, Stopwatch, Industry, Economy

Image Source: Pixabay
 

US consumer confidence dipped again and remains on par with where we were during the pandemic. Concerns about the potential for tariff-induced price rises, a rapidly cooling jobs market, and uncertainties over wealth are all having an influence and point to subdued consumer spending growth over the coming months.


Sentiment resumes its slide
 

The October Conference Board measure of US consumer confidence dropped to 94.6 from an upwardly revised 95.6 print for September. The size of the dip was in line with the consensus survey.

The details show a decent pick-up in perceptions surrounding current conditions to 129.3 from 127.5, which likely reflects a combination of stronger stock markets and falling gasoline prices, but the expectations component fell from 74.4 to 71.5. This measure is the more useful indicator as it has had a decent relationship with consumer spending growth over the last few decades. It is currently consistent with annualised spending growth of about 1-1.5%. That's not terrible, but is well short of what we have experienced since the end of the pandemic.

It's likely that lingering anxiety about the potential for tariff-induced price hikes and a cooling of the jobs market are the main drivers of this softer outcome.


Consumer expectations & spending growth
 

Source: Macrobond, ING 


Job perceptions remain weak
 

The "plentiful" vs "hard to get" jobs metric was little changed and continues to suggest upside risks for the unemployment rate. The premise being that workers see and feel changes in the jobs market before they show up in the official data – not that we are going to get another jobs report for a while, given the government shutdown. All in all, nothing here to argue against a 25bp Federal Reserve rate cut tomorrow.


Households remain worried about the jobs market, saying jobs are getting tougher to come by
 

Source: Macrobond, ING 


House prices buck the downward trend, but challenges linger
 

The other data report from earlier was the S&P Case Shiller US house price index, which snapped a five-month falling streak and rose 0.2% month-on-month in August. Expectations had been for a sixth consecutive monthly drop based on a lack of affordability due to elevated prices and high mortgage rates constraining demand, coming up against rising supply of homes for sale.

To highlight this, based on the median-sized mortgage for a home purchase taken out last week of $438,900 on a 30Y fixed mortgage at 6.37%, this works out at a monthly payment of $2,764, which is equivalent to 47% of median after-tax incomes in the US.


S&P Case Shiller house price levels 2006 =100
 

Source: Macrobond, ING 
 

Today's outcome leaves national house prices 1.5% higher than a year ago. Chicago is seeing the strongest gains right now (up 0.6% MoM/5.3% three-month annualised), with Minneapolis in second place (0.35% MoM/3.7% 3M ann.), but they had lagged well behind most markets over the previous five years.

Phoenix, Miami and Las Vegas are the weakest, seeing prices fall 0.5-0.6% MoM, leaving the 3M annualised rates in a -8 to -10% range. The chart above is of house price levels rebased to 2006 = 100 to show how different markets have performed.


More By This Author:

Italian Confidence Data Signals A Decent Start To 2025’s Final Quarter
FX Daily: Jobs And Consumer Confidence To Weigh On Dollar
The Commodities Feed: Sanction Concerns Boost Diesel Prices

Disclaimer: This publication has been prepared by the Economic and Financial Analysis Division of ING Bank N.V. (“ING”) solely for information purposes without regard to any ...

more
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