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UM Consumer Confidence Index Rebounds On Stock Gains

ANN ARBOR (WWJ) -- Consumer confidence rebounded in late November, shaking off the last remnants of the federal shutdown.

The November increase was due to an improved outlook for the economy, with the gains primarily among upper income households according to the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers. Conducted by the UM Institute for Social Research since 1946, the surveys monitor consumer attitudes and expectations.

Increases in household income and wealth were reflected in more optimistic personal financial assessments among those in the upper third of the income distribution, whereas households in the bottom third reported declines in their incomes as well as negative changes in their net worth, according to Curtin.

The current state of consumer sentiment is consistent with an economic growth rate slightly above 2 percent, largely stimulated by wealth gains not improvements in jobs and wages, he said. This amounts to continued economic stagnation, which can be defined like the Fed's definition of stable prices, at about 2 percent -- the average GDP growth rate in the past few years.

"Consumers expressed lingering concerns over the upcoming Congressional deadline for reaching a settlement on the federal budget and debt ceiling," Curtin said. "While a grand bargain covering both entitlements and taxes could reduce policy uncertainty, it seems far more likely that the only agreement will be to delay a settlement until after the 2014 elections. Consumers expect the growth rate in 2014 will be far short of the economy's potential. The term that best fits the outlook of consumers is stagnation. Consumers' overall assessment of economic prospects is not bad and not good. Economic stagnation is like purgatory, it is neither heaven nor hell."

Households in the top third of the income distribution (incomes above $75,000) reported more recent improvement in their finances, while those in the bottom third (below $35,000) reported virtually unchanged finances. While this gap is wider than usual, the gap in future financial prospects is much narrower than normal. Rather than expecting even greater gains in the future, high-income households did not view their future financial prospects much differently than those with incomes in the bottom two-thirds of the income distribution.

Spontaneous negative references to the government's economic policies were made by 32 percent in November, just below the all-time peak of 37 percent set last month. When directly asked for their views of economic policies, half of all consumers gave unfavorable ratings, nearly equal to the worst level ever recorded in the past half century.

The Sentiment Index was 75.1 in November 2013, between the 73.2 in October and 77.5 in September, but well below last November's 82.7. Most of the recent strength was in the Expectations Index, which rose to 66.8 in November from 62.5 in October, but was below last year's 77.7. The Current Conditions Index was 88.0 in November, just below the 89.9 in October and last November's 90.6.

The Survey of Consumers is a rotating panel survey based on a nationally representative sample that gives each household in the United States an equal probability of being selected. Interviews are conducted throughout the month by telephone. The minimum monthly change required for significance at the 95-percent level in the Sentiment Index is 4.8 points; for Current and Expectations Indices the minimum is 6.0 points.

More at http://press.sca.isr.umich.edu.

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