April 11, 2025

The preliminary estimate of consumer sentiment for April fell 6.2 points to 50.8 after having declined 10.7 points in March and 3.4 points in February.  This is the fourth consecutive decline in sentiment.  The January level is the lowest since June 2022.

Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu said, “Consumer sentiment fell for the fourth straight month, plunging 11% from March. This decline was, like the last month’s, pervasive and unanimous across age, income, education, geographic region, and political affiliation. Sentiment has now lost more than 30% since December 2024 amid growing worries about trade war developments that have oscillated over the course of the year. Consumers report multiple warning signs that raise the risk of recession: expectations for business conditions, personal finances, incomes, inflation, and labor markets all continued to deteriorate this month. The share of consumers expecting unemployment to rise in the year ahead increased for the fifth consecutive month and is now more than double the November 2024 reading and the highest since 2009. This lack of labor market confidence lies in sharp contrast to the past several years, when robust spending was supported primarily by strong labor markets and incomes. 

She added that,, Year-ahead inflation expectations surged from 5.0% last month to 6.7% this month, the highest reading since 1981 and marking four consecutive months of unusually large increases of 0.5 percentage points or more. This month’s rise was seen across all three political affiliations. Long-run inflation expectations climbed from 4.1% in March to 4.4% in April, reflecting a particularly large jump among independents.”

While this is a rather dramatic-looking drop in confidence, the last time that confidence fell this low was when inflation was at its peak.  But the steep drop never translated into a reduction in consumer spending.  Unfortunately, the relationship between confidence and spending has not worked well for the past several years.

The uncertainty regarding policy, tariffs in particular, is taking a toll.  In fact, as noted above, inflation expectations rose from 5.0% in the coming year to 6.7%.  That is a huge monthly jump and is, apparently, attributable to tariffs.  We actually expect inflation to be fairly steady in the coming year as reduced wage pressures and falling home prices keep inflation in check.  A big pickup in the inflation rate seems highly unlikely.  Consumers appear to be overly concerned.

Both the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index and the Conference Board’s measure of consumer confidence have fallen sharply.  The two series can diverge from one month to the next, but the trends are similar.

W. expect to see 0.5% GDP growth in first quarter as extremely bad weather in January and the wildfires in California take a toll, and 2.0% GDP growth for 2025 as a whole.

Consumers’ assessment of current conditions declined 7.3 points  from.63.6 to 56.5

Consumer expectations for six months from now fell 5.4 points from 52.6 to 47.2..

Stephen Slifer

NumberNomics

Charleston, SC