Consumer Sentiment Steady at 97.5 in Early December

Ann Arbor, MI, December 7, 2018-Consumer sentiment held steady at 97.5 in early December, according to preliminary results from the University of Michigan.

This represents a 1.7% increase year over year.

“Consumer sentiment was unchanged from last month's reading and has remained at very favorable levels since the start of 2017,” says Survey of Consumers chief economist Richard Curtin. “In the two years from January 2017 to December 2018, the Sentiment Index was consistently above 90.0, averaging 97.5, identical to the early December reading. The last time the Sentiment Index was consistently above 90.0 for at least as long was from 1997 to 2000, recording a four-year average of 105.3. There are a number of plausible causes for the difference in consumer optimism from the late 1990's to today, most of which revolve around job and wage prospects. As noted in last month's report, as long as job and income growth remain strong, rising prices and interest rates will not cause substantial cutbacks in spending. In the early December survey, however, consumers did mention hearing much more negative news about future job prospects. The chart above shows the close relationship between recent changes in per capita durable spending and trends in unemployment expectations. Moreover, most consumers understand that the goal of increasing interest rates is to slow the pace of economic growth. In past expansions, there was plenty of room between low and high interest rates to nudge up rates without damaging consumer spending. The gap has been squeezed to just a few percentage points and more caution is now warranted.”