U.S. consumer confidence improved significantly more than expected in June, hitting a four-month high as households showed signs of relief from slowing inflation and post-resolution of the dispute over the debt ceiling at the beginning of the month. The index measuring this confidence rose 8.8% from May to 64.4 points, according to final results released Friday by the University of Michigan. This is still higher than the expectations of analysts, who anticipated the index at 63.9 points, the level given during the intermediate estimate in mid-June, according to the consensus published by Briefing.com.
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The improvement concernsall demographic groups“, underlined Joanna Hsu, director of the investigation quoted in the press release, as well as their views on the current conditions as well as the medium-term prospects. Nevertheless, “their feeling about their personal situation remains unchanged, while the persistence of high prices (…) continues to weigh on the mood of consumersMs. Hsu recalled. As for their expectations for inflation, it has also improved, with US consumers now expecting it at 3.3% by the end of the year, while they still expected it at 4.2. % on this date last month.
The two inflation indices in the United States fell sharply in May, falling below the 4% mark for the PCE index (+3.8%) published on Friday and which is the one taken into account by the Fed for its monetary policy, and settling at 4% for the CPI index, on which pensions are calculated in particular.
2023-06-30 14:47:36
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