The latest University of Michigan U.S. consumer sentiment survey revealed that consumer optimism surged regarding the economy in June vs. a month prior.
The U of M’s index for consumer sentiment increased to 60.5 in June from 52.2 in May, reflecting a 15.9% increase month-over-month, but still 20% below December 2024 expectations. Additionally, June’s figure was down 11.3% year-over-year. Economists polled by news outlets forecasted a preliminary reading of 53.5 in June.
In the Store: MDM’s U.S. MRO Market Trends ReportÂ
The Survey of Consumers director noted that June saw broad increases consistently across all groups by age, income, wealth, political party and geographic region.
University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index — Month-Over-Month
source: tradingeconomics.com
The survey noted that consumers sensed a relative easing of tariff-related pressures, noting that while concerns about broader economic risks remain, sentiment has stabilized somewhat since the initial shock of April’s high tariffs and the subsequent policy volatility.
MDM‘s (free) Virtual Data Analytics Summit coming June 18 – Register Here!Â
According to the survey results, long-run inflation expectations decreased for the second consecutive month, declining from 4.2% in May to 4.1% in June.
Similarly, the survey’s index for year-ahead expectations dropped to 5.1% in June, following May’s 6.6%. The monthly reading was still well above the range of 2.3% to 3.0%in the two years preceding the COVID-19 pandemic.
Related Posts
-
The survey showed U.S. consumer sentiment significantly dropped in March, with inflation expectations hitting their…
-
The survey showed U.S. consumer sentiment declined in January, following six-months of positive sentiment.
-
U.S. consumer sentiment dropped drastically in April, marking its fourth straight monthly decline amid rising…