Updated
Updated · PR Newswire · Jun 30
US Consumer Confidence Edges Up to 91.2 as Jobs Views Weaken and Oil Prices Fall
Updated
Updated · PR Newswire · Jun 30

US Consumer Confidence Edges Up to 91.2 as Jobs Views Weaken and Oil Prices Fall

3 articles · Updated · PR Newswire · Jun 30

Summary

  • The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index rose 0.6 point to 91.2 in June, a modest gain from May’s revised 90.6 as lower oil prices eased inflation fears.
  • The improvement came entirely from expectations: the Expectations Index climbed 3.0 points to 74.4, while the Present Situation Index fell 3.0 points to 116.4.
  • Labor-market sentiment softened notably, with the share saying jobs were “hard to get” rising to 22.5%—the highest since January 2021—and the labor-market differential dropping 2.6 points to 2.4.
  • Consumers were more upbeat about business conditions and incomes six months ahead, helped by the June 1-23 survey period that included an extension of the US-Iran ceasefire and calmer inflation expectations.
  • Even so, views of current family finances worsened for a third straight month, recession worries ticked up, and most consumers still expected higher interest rates over the next year.

Insights

Why do Americans feel so pessimistic about an economy that shows such resilience?
As confidence surveys tell different stories, which one reflects the consumer's true reality?
If consumers are so worried about their finances, why does their spending remain so robust?