July 26, 2024

The final estimate of consumer sentiment for July declined 1.8 points to 66.4 after having fallen 0.9 point in June as consumers worry that inflation might remain higher than expected for a protracted period.

Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu said, “Sentiment has lifted 33% above the June 2022 historic low, but it remains guarded as high prices continue to drag down attitudes, particularly for those with lower incomes.”

Many consumers have been concerned by the fact that while their nominal earnings were rising, inflation was eroding their purchasing power and, as a result, wages in real terms declined for roughly two years.  They have begun to rise slightly in recent months, but consumer real income remains far below what it was prior to the recession.

In addition, many consumer prices have risen sharply since the recession.  The Fed promised that the increase in prices would prove to be “temporary”.  That has not been the case.  This is particularly problematic because so many of those price gains are on necessary commodities like food, shelter, and transportation which hit lower income families the hardest.

Real consumer spending has risen 2.6% in the past year. In the last three months that has slowed to 2.2%.  But with real disposable income rising at a 1.0% pace consumer spending should slow further.

The slower growth should allow the Fed to ease at some point close to yearend.  We expect the funds rate to fall from 5.3% to 5.1% by the end of the year and continue falling to 3.6% in 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.

We got 2.8% GDP growth second quarter.  We expect to see GDP growth of 0.9% in the third quarter and 1.6% in Q4.

Consumers’ assessment of current conditions fell 3.2 points from 65.9 to 62.7.

Consumer expectations for six months from now declined 0.8 point from 69.6 to 68.8.

Stephen Slifer

NumberNomics

Charleston, SC