UMich Consumer Sentiment Survey Confuses In September
The headline UMich consumer sentiment index rose in September with both ‘current conditions’ and ‘expectations’ picking up…
Source: Bloomberg
This increase was seen across all education groups and political affiliations.
Furthermore, all five index components gained, led by a 6% surge in one-year business expectations. The expectations index is now 13% above a year ago and reflects greater optimism across a broad swath of the population.
Buying Conditions improved across the board in September…
Source: Bloomberg
And short-term inflation expectations tumbled to the lowest since Dec 2020 (as medium-term inflation expectations picked up)…
Source: Bloomberg
Finally, if inflation expectations are to be believed, 10Y Treasury yields are set to drop dramatically from here…
Source: Bloomberg
Which is interesting since in the same survey, the number of respondents who see interest rates higher in the next year reached a record high…
Source: Bloomberg
UMich reports that sentiment appears to be building some momentum as consumers’ expectations for the economy brighten.
At the same time, many consumers continue to report that their expectations hinge on the results of the upcoming election.
Relative to August, consumers across political parties are increasingly expecting a Harris presidency, though about two-thirds of Republicans still expect Trump to win.
But amid all that “yay Kamala” bullshit, survey respondents’ views on the Biden/Harris policies remain well below Trump’s…
So, to summarize the confusion – we are about to see a resurgence in ‘buying’… which will apparently ‘help lower inflation’? …and we are sure that 51 nobel laureate economists will back this ‘economic’ framework.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 09/27/2024 – 10:35
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