U.S. consumer sentiment plummets to near-decade low
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[August 30, 2021] By
Evan Sully
(Reuters) -U.S. consumer sentiment plunged
to its lowest level in nearly a decade in August as consumers' views of
their personal financial prospects continued to worsen due to smaller
income gains amid higher inflationary trends, a survey showed on Friday.
The University of Michigan said its consumer sentiment index fell to
70.3 in August - the lowest since December 2011 - from July's final
reading of 81.2. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a reading of
70.7.
August's final reading was little changed from the preliminary reading
of 70.2 earlier this month. The losses were widespread across all
demographic groups and regions.
"The extraordinary falloff in sentiment also reflects an emotional
response, from dashed hopes that the pandemic would soon end and lives
could return to normal," Richard Curtin, the survey director, said in a
statement.
The economy is still expected to grow this year at its fastest pace in
four decades after falling into a brief recession in 2020 caused by the
coronavirus pandemic.

However, the recovery is showing some indication of cooling off and
COVID-19 cases have continued to climb in August as the more
transmissible Delta variant spreads rapidly across the country. Labor
shortages across the service sector also persist while supply chain
disruptions have continued.
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A woman carries Nike
shopping bags at the Citadel Outlet mall, as the global outbreak of
the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in Commerce,
California, U.S., December 3, 2020. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File
Photo/File Photo

The survey's gauge of consumer expectations declined to 65.1 in August, its
lowest reading since October 2013, from July's 79.0, and was little changed from
the mid-month reading of 65.2.
The survey's one-year inflation expectation eased to 4.6% from 4.7% in July,
while the survey's five-year inflation outlook ticked up to 2.9% from 2.8%.
"With the economy moving past peak growth and peak inflation, we expect cooler
inflation readings in the coming months to support an uptick in optimism among
consumers," said Mahir Rasheed, an economist at Oxford Economics. "Greater
vaccine uptake and a stronger labor market will also encourage greater optimism
with vaccination rates improving while restraints on labor supply will relax in
the fall."
Consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic
activity, also slowed in July, supporting views that economic growth will ease
in the third quarter.
(Reporting by Evan Sully; Editing by Andrea Ricci and Chizu Nomiyama)
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