The final
reading for the October Reuters/Michigan index of consumer sentiment came in at
81.8 compared to a preliminary reading of 81.2 and the September final reading
of 80.4. This was the highest reading since March.
Economists had
forecast the index to remain unrevised at 81.2.
According to
the report, the index of the current economic conditions fell 2.2percent m-o-m
to 85.9 from September’s final reading of 87.8. Meanwhile, the index of
consumer expectations climbed 4.8 percent m-o-m to 79.2 from September’s final
reading of 75.6.
“Consumer
sentiment remained virtually unchanged from the first half of October (+0.6
points) and was insignificantly different from last month's figure (+1.4
points)”, noted Richard Curtin, the Surveys of Consumers chief economist. “Fear
and loathing produced this false sense of stability. Fears were generated by
rising covid infection and death rates, and loathing was generated by the
hyper-partisanship that has driven the election to ideological extremes.
Moreover, the impact of the covid virus and the extremes of hyper-partisanship
will continue long past next week's election, with the potential to permanently
alter the economic and political landscape.”