Despite high inflation, rising interest rates and a possible recession, US consumer confidence saw a sharp rebound.
The confidence of American consumers rebounded this month to end the year on a high note despite high inflation, rising interest rates that have made credit cards and mortgages more expensive, and growing anxiety about a possible recession.
The Conference Board reported Wednesday that its consumer confidence index rose to 108.3 in December, up from 101.4 in November. It was a sharp rebound, pushing the index to its highest level since April. Last month’s figure was the lowest since July.
The business research group’s present situation index – which measures consumers’ assessment of current business and labour market conditions – also rose, to 147.2 this month from 138.3 in November.
The board’s expectations index – a measure of consumers’ six-month outlook for income, business and labour conditions – rose to 82.4 from 76.7. Readings near or below 80 are associated with recession.
Lynn Franco, senior director of economic indicators at the Conference Board, noted that inflation expectations retreated in December to their lowest level since September of last year, mostly due to recent declines in petrol prices. The number of people saying they planned to go on vacations rose, but the number of those intending to buy homes and big-ticket appliances declined.
“This shift in consumers’ preference from big-ticket items to services will continue in 2023, as will headwinds from inflation and interest rate hikes,” Franco said.
Headwinds
Getting a clear read on recent consumer behaviour has been tricky.
The government reported last week that Americans cut back sharply on retail spending in November as the holiday shopping season began. High prices and rising interest rates are forcing families, particularly lower-income households, to make harder decisions about what they buy.
Retail sales fell 0.6 percent from October to November after a sharp 1.3 percent rise the previous month. However, Americans opened their wallets on Black Friday and over the post-Thanksgiving weekend. Spending on Black Friday jumped 12 percent compared with a year ago, according to MasterCard Spending Pulse, though that figure is not adjusted for inflation.
And on so-called “Cyber Monday” earlier this week Americans boosted their online spending by 5.8 percent from a year earlier, Adobe Analytics said.
Americans have been resilient in their spending since inflation first began to spike almost 18 months ago, but the capacity to maintain that pace during a period of high inflation may have begun to ebb. Inflation has retreated from the four-decade high it reached mid-year but remains elevated, enough to erode the spending power of Americans. Prices were 7.1 percent higher in November than they were a year ago.
A rising number of households are stepping up their use of credit cards – or “buy now, pay later” plans as prices rise, and that cannot continue indefinitely.
Americans are also dipping into savings, which rose sharply during the pandemic as government stimulus checks and the postponement of spending on travel and entertainment fattened bank accounts.
The savings rate in October slid to 2.3 percent, the lowest level since 2005.
The willingness to buy a home has faded with mortgage rates that have doubled in the past year. The National Association of Realtors reported Wednesday that sales of previously occupied US homes slowed for the tenth consecutive month in November. Sales plunged 35.4 percent from November last year.