Confidence improves slightly but remains weak
U.S. consumer confidence showed a modest rebound in January, though sentiment remains well below levels seen a year ago as households continue to face elevated costs and uncertain job prospects.
The University of Michigan’s Index of Consumer Sentiment rose to 56.4 in January, an increase of 3.5 points from December. Despite the improvement, the index is still about 21% lower than its level a year earlier, when it stood at 71.7.
Small gains beat expectations
The reading exceeded market expectations, as economists surveyed by Bloomberg had anticipated a result closer to the preliminary estimate of 54 released earlier in the month.
According to survey director Joanne Hsu, consumers are seeing marginal improvements across several areas, though the changes remain limited. Inflation expectations and labor market outlooks have edged higher, but not enough to suggest a meaningful shift in confidence.
Inflation outlook shows tentative easing
Year-ahead inflation expectations declined slightly to 4%, down from 4.2% in December. While this suggests consumers perceive some stabilization in price pressures, expectations remain above levels households consider comfortable.
Hsu cautioned that these gains could prove fragile if renewed trade tensions reemerge, noting that consumer optimism has been gradually recovering after months of concern over tariffs.
Trade tensions remain a potential risk
The survey period concluded shortly after President Trump threatened new tariffs on eight European countries over Greenland-related negotiations. Those tensions eased days later following the announcement of a framework agreement with NATO leadership.
Consumers do not appear to be directly linking international developments to their personal economic outlook, according to the survey. However, a sustained escalation in trade disputes could weigh on sentiment if tariff uncertainty intensifies.
While brief tariff headlines may not significantly alter consumer views, a prolonged or aggressive trade confrontation could reverse recent gains in confidence.
