U.S. Consumer Sentiment in May Shrinks to 28-Year Low

Tags: DJIA
16 May 10:53pm
Read original blog entry

Right on the heels of stronger-than-expected housing data, the Street gets whammied with this: According to a report from the University of Michigan/Reuters, the U.S. consumer sentiment index in May fell to 59.5 from 62.6 in April. Economists were looking for a drop to 61.0.

Meanwhile, the expectations index in May fell to 51.7 from 53.3 in April, marking its lowest level since 1990, while the current conditions index dropped to 71.7 from 77.0 in April, marking its lowest level in 28 years.

Most economists attribute the recent drop in consumer sentiment to higher fuel and food prices - which many predict won't peak until late summer as well as declining home values.


Copyright Schaeffer's Investment Research http://www.schaeffersresearch.com

Comments

Back to top

Post comment

Back to top

Post a comment

Please login to post a comment

About

SchaeffersResearch

Schaeffer’s Investment Research, founded by Bernie Schaeffer in 1981, is a research-driven provider of investment research and recommendations featuring a unique, time-tested analysis of investor expectations. Schaeffer's contrarian approach, called Expectational Analysis®, focuses on stocks with technical and fundamental trends that run counter to investor expectations. The firm publishes Bernie Schaeffer's Option Advisor, the nation's leading options subscription publication and it's website, www.SchaeffersResearch.com, is recognized as one of the leading information sources for stock and options traders and was cited as the top options website by both Forbes and Barron's.