Premium
This is an archive article published on August 12, 2011

US consumer sentiment slumps,retail jump

U.S. consumer sentiment worsened sharply in early August,falling to the lowest index level since 1980.

U.S. consumer sentiment worsened sharply in early August,falling to the lowest index level since 1980,even though retail sales posted their biggest gains in three months in July,separate reports on Friday showed.

short article insert U.S. consumer sentiment dropped to its lowest point in more than three decades,as fears of a stalled recovery combined with despair over government policies,a survey released on Friday showed.

The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan’s preliminary August reading on the overall index on consumer sentiment fell to 54.9,the lowest since May 1980,down from 63.7 in July. It was well below the the median forecast of 63.0 among economists polled by Reuters.

Story continues below this ad

High unemployment,stagnant wages and the protracted debate over raising the U.S. government debt ceiling spooked consumers who were polled before the Standard and Poor’s downgraded the U.S. government’s credit rating last Friday. Never before in the history of the surveys have so many consumers spontaneously mentioned negative aspects of the government’s role,survey director Richard Curtin said in a statement. This was more than the simple recognition that traditional monetary and fiscal policy measures were largely spent; it was the realization that the government was unable or unwilling to act,Curtin added.

Two-thirds of all consumers reported that the economy had recently worsened,and just one-in-five anticipated any gains during the year ahead.

Bad times in the economy were expected by 75 percent of all consumers in early August,just below the all-time peak of 82 percent in 1980.

U.S. RETAIL SALES JUMP IN JULY However,in a separate report from the U.S. Commerce Department U.S. retail sales in July posted their biggest gain since March,tempering fears that the world’s largest economy might be slipping back into recession.

Story continues below this ad

Sales climbed 0.5 percent,in line with analyst forecasts and following an upwardly revised 0.3 percent gain in June,according to Commerce Department data released on Friday.

Consumer spending accounts for two thirds of U.S. economic activity,and the data indicates the third quarter was off to a decent start.

Excluding autos,sales increased 0.5 percent,well above forecasts for a 0.2 percent gain. The figures were bolstered by a 1.6 percent jump in gasoline station sales,in part reflecting the higher cost of fuel.

When you look at the overall data that’s been coming out,it’s really a mixed bag,and this shows that the economy is not falling off its wheels,said Rudy Narvas,senior economist at Societe Generale in New York.

Story continues below this ad

U.S. economic growth was anemic in the first half of the year and unemployment remained elevated,raising worries that the recovery might again falter and triggering speculation that the Federal Reserve might need to resort to additional monetary easing.

U.S. stocks fell after the consumer sentiment report after earlier gaining in the wake of the retail sales data.

Retail sales excluding autos,gasoline and building materials rose 0.4 percent. Sporting goods stores and department stores fared the worst in an otherwise firm report,with sales dropping 1.5 percent and 0.8 percent,respectively.

One month’s gain in retail spending was not sufficient to put to rest concerns that the U.S. economy lacks sufficient momentum to create new jobs,particularly with Washington set on cutting spending rather than doing more to stimulate investment and hiring.

Story continues below this ad

Compounding uncertainty,financial markets have been see-sawing this week as investors alternate between seeking opportunity in battered shares prices and fretting that the market could be on the verge of a further dive.

Europe’s worsening debt crisis,which has now gone well beyond the so-called periphery and is directly affecting France,has raised the cost of interbank borrowing in money markets,raising the specter of a return to the credit crunch of late 2008.

Global stock markets recovered ground on Friday after a rollercoaster week,but sentiment was still fragile. Investors would be looking to U.S. consumer sentiment figures for August released on Friday for clues into whether the retail spending gains that occurred in July will be sustained as the year progresses.

Economists note that late July and early August were a period of extreme turbulence for the United States as the country faced a political deadlock that pushed it to the brink of default and led to a historic downgrade by Standard & Poor’s of the U.S. AAA credit rating.

Latest Comment
Post Comment
Read Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement