Novembert 7, 2025

The preliminary estimate of consumer sentiment for October fell 3.3 points in November to 50.3 after having declined 1.5 points in October.  After temporarily climbing to 61.7 in July, this series has declined steadily n the past four months.

Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu said, “Consumer sentiment fell back about 6% this November, led by a 17% drop in current personal finances and a 11% decline in year-ahead expected business conditions. With the federal government shutdown dragging on for over a month, consumers are now expressing worries about potential negative consequences for the economy. This month’s decline in sentiment was widespread throughout the population, seen across age, income, and political affiliation. One key exception: consumers with the largest tercile of stock holdings posted a notable 11% increase in sentiment, supported by continued strength in stock markets. 

She added that, “Year-ahead inflation expectations inched up from 4.6% last month to 4.7% this month and remained well below readings in May in the wake of the initial announcements of major tariff changes. Long-run inflation expectations declined from 3.9% last month to 3.6% in November.”

There has been a rather dramatic drop in confidence since the beginning of the year. The last time that confidence was this low was in 2022 when inflation was at its peak.  But the steep drop then never translated into a reduction in consumer spending.  In recent months the pace of consumer spending has been holding up well.  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, 5-year inflation expectations edged lower to 3.6% as consumers continue to fret about the potential impact of tariffs.  At the beginning of this year consumers expected a 3.1% 5-year inflation rate.  In our opinion, a big pickup in the inflation rate seems highly unlikely.  Consumers appear to be overly concerned.  Over a 5-year period we expect inflation to be roughly in line with the Fed’s 2.0% target.  Over a 10-year period the Treasury market’s inflation-indexed 10-year note yield implies a 2.4% increase  in inflation.

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.

Following a 0.6% decline in GDP in the first quarter GDP rose 3.8%  in the second quarter and we expect 3.3% GDP growth in the third quarter.

Consumers’ assessment of current conditions fell 6.3 points from 58.6 to 52.3.

Consumer expectations for six months from now declined 1.3 points from 50.3 to 49.0.

Stephen Slifer

NumberNomics

Charleston, SC