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Friday, November 01, 2013

Weekly Consumer Comfort Index Tumbles To Lowest Since October 2012

If US consumers were miraculously supposed to regain all their confidence when the government reopened (even if companies completely ignored said shutdown according to the epic jump in the Chicago PMI - the biggest jump in 30 years), so far that has failed to happen based on the latest weekly Bloomberg consumer comfort index, which moments ago hit -37.6 down from -36.1 a week earlier, its lowest print since October 2012. With this drop the index has extended its five-week retreat that accelerated during the federal government’s partial shutdown and has slowed – but not stopped – in the two weeks since. Today the index is 21.3 points worse than its long-term average and 6.3 points worse than this year’s average. And what is more worrisome for The Fed, they have lost "the rich" as the comfort of the highest income survey participants has fallen to its lowest in 7 months - collapsing back to its 'normalized' divide with the 'poor'.

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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Who dreams this **** up? Weekly Consumer Comfort Index Tumbles???? I'm a consumer and no one has checked my index? this week. More smoke, more mirrors for the brain dead. F.B.O.

Anonymous said...

DUH 1:01-The Consumer Index is determined by savings and spending. When people are spending, that generally means they are confidence.