February 7, 2025

The preliminary estimate of consumer sentiment for February fell 3.3 points to 67.8 after declining 2.9 points in January.  The January level is the lowest since July of last year.

Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu said, “Consumer sentiment fell for the second straight month, dropping about 5% to reach its lowest reading since July 2024. The decrease was pervasive, with Republicans, Independents, and Democrats all posting sentiment declines from January, along with consumers across age and wealth groups. Furthermore, all five index components deteriorated this month, led by a 12% slide in buying conditions for durables, in part due to a perception that it may be too late to avoid the negative impact of tariff policy. Expectations for personal finances sank about 6% from last month, again seen across all political affiliations, reaching its lowest value since October 2023. Many consumers appear worried that high inflation will return within the next year. Interviews for this release concluded on February 4.,”

She added that, “Year-ahead inflation expectations jumped up from 3.3% last month to 4.3% this month, the highest reading since November 2023 and marking two consecutive months of unusually large increases. This is only the fifth time in 14 years we have seen such a large one-month rise (one percentage point or more) in year-ahead inflation expectations. The current reading is now well above the 2.3-3.0% range seen in the two years prior to the pandemic. Long-run inflation expectations ticked up from 3.2% last month to 3.3% this month. Long-run inflation expectations remain elevated relative to the 2.2-2.6% range seen in the two years pre-pandemic.”

While sentiment has risen in the past year it fell sharply from April 2021 through the middle of 2022.  But their spending never slowed down at all during that time frame and in the past year has risen a solid 3.1%.

In February consumers worried that inflation was about to accelerate as the result of tariffs.  In fact, as noted about, inflation expectations rose from 3.3% in the coming year to 4.3%.  That is a huge monthly jump and is, apparently, attributable to tariffs.  We actually expect inflation to edge lower 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.

The slower growth rate for inflation should allow the Fed to continue to ease.  We expect the funds rate to fall from 4.8% currently to 3.8% by the end of 2025..

Both the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index and the Conference Board’s measure of consumer confidence both show a moderate rebound in the past couple of months.  The two series can diverge from one month to the next, but the trends are similar.

GDP grew 2.3% GDP growth  in Q4 and we expect to see 3.0% GDP growth in both the first quarter and for 2025 as a whole.

Consumers’ assessment of current conditions declined 5.3 points  from.74.0 to 68.7.

Consumer expectations for six months from now fell 2.0 points from 69.3 to 67.3..

Stephen Slifer

NumberNomics

Charleston, SC