After rebounding strongly from November to January, US Consumer Confidence tumbled in February, according to the latest survey from The Conference Board, beating expectations across the board.
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Consumer confidence fell to 106.7 (estimate 115.
0) in February from revised 110.9 in January -
Present situation fell to 147.2 from revised 154.9 in January
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Expectations index fell to 79.8 from revised 81.5 in January
Source: Bloomberg
While that decline on the chart does not look like much, it is dramatic relative to expectations and pre-revision levels. A six-sigma miss...
Source: Bloomberg
But, for the fourth straight month, The Conference Board revised its consumer confidence data significantly lower. In fact January's was the biggest downward revision since Feb 2022...
Source: Bloomberg
So January's spike above July's revised highs which everyone shot their load of exuberance over... is gonzo!!
Source: Bloomberg
For context, that is 11.1 pts of 'confidence' erased by 'adjustments/revisions' in four months - by far the largest downward shift in the survey's history...
Source: Bloomberg
Which brings up the same question we had last month?
How do you revise consumer confidence down? Do you ask them again and they tell you, "You know what, I wasn't feeling it as much as I thought I was"
— Zebra Cat (@ZebraCat20)
The Conference Board's indicator inflation expectations tumbled further to +5.2% - still notably high but trend in the right direction...
Source: Bloomberg
The labor market indicators trended notably stronger again in February?
Source: Bloomberg
Bidenomics: where everything is revised lower a month after nobody remembers.







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