The
Conference Board announced on Tuesday its U.S. consumer confidence edged up 0.2
points to 129.1 in July from 128.9 in June. This was the highest reading since
February 2020.
Economists
had expected consumer confidence to ease to 123.9.
June’s
consumer confidence reading was revised up from the originally estimated 127.3.
The
survey showed that the present situation index rose from 159.6 in June to 160.3
this month. Meanwhile, the expectations index edged down from 108.5 last month
to 108.4 in July.
“Consumer
confidence was flat in July but remains at its highest level since February
2020,” noted Lynn Franco, Senior Director of Economic Indicators at The
Conference Board. “Consumers’ appraisal of present-day conditions held steady,
suggesting economic growth in Q3 is off to a strong start. Consumers’ optimism
about the short-term outlook didn’t waver, and they continued to expect that
business conditions, jobs, and personal financial prospects will improve.
Short-term inflation expectations eased slightly but remained elevated.
Spending intentions picked up in July, with a larger percentage of consumers
saying they planned to purchase homes, automobiles, and major appliances in the
coming months. Thus, consumer spending should continue to support robust
economic growth in the second half of 2021.”