Fresh data from the University of Michigan reveals that American consumer confidence expanded less than anticipated during December, painting a nuanced picture of economic sentiment heading into 2025. The revised sentiment index landed at 52.9—a less than expected performance compared to the preliminary estimate of 53.3, disappointing those who had forecasted an upward adjustment to 53.4.
Index Movement and Historical Context
Despite this modest showing, the headline figure still reflects improvement from November’s 51.0 reading, continuing a recovery trajectory from the devastating 50.0 low recorded in June 2022. The month-over-month progression demonstrates cautious optimism among American households, though momentum remains restrained.
The underlying components tell divergent stories. Consumer expectations index demonstrated notable strength, climbing sharply to 54.6 from November’s 51.0 level, suggesting households are increasingly hopeful about future conditions. In stark contrast, the current conditions gauge weakened to 50.4 from the previous month’s 51.1, indicating present economic circumstances feel less favorable than near-term prospects.
Inflation Trends Show Positive Momentum
Perhaps the most encouraging signal emerges from inflation expectations data. Year-ahead inflation forecasts declined for the fourth consecutive month, settling at a fresh eleven-month low of 4.2 percent, down from 4.5 percent in November. This marks meaningful progress in consumer price perception.
Long-duration inflation expectations also retreated to 3.2 percent in December, matching January 2025 levels and edging down from November’s 3.4 percent. As noted by Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu, this range compares favorably to 2024 data, which fluctuated between 2.8 and 3.2 percent, and remains elevated relative to 2019-2020 readings that stayed below 2.8 percent throughout both years.
The December readings underscore persistent consumer anxiety despite inflation moderation, with sentiment improvements driven primarily by shifting expectations rather than satisfaction with current economic realities.
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December Consumer Sentiment Falls Short of Expectations, with Mixed Signals Emerging
Fresh data from the University of Michigan reveals that American consumer confidence expanded less than anticipated during December, painting a nuanced picture of economic sentiment heading into 2025. The revised sentiment index landed at 52.9—a less than expected performance compared to the preliminary estimate of 53.3, disappointing those who had forecasted an upward adjustment to 53.4.
Index Movement and Historical Context
Despite this modest showing, the headline figure still reflects improvement from November’s 51.0 reading, continuing a recovery trajectory from the devastating 50.0 low recorded in June 2022. The month-over-month progression demonstrates cautious optimism among American households, though momentum remains restrained.
The underlying components tell divergent stories. Consumer expectations index demonstrated notable strength, climbing sharply to 54.6 from November’s 51.0 level, suggesting households are increasingly hopeful about future conditions. In stark contrast, the current conditions gauge weakened to 50.4 from the previous month’s 51.1, indicating present economic circumstances feel less favorable than near-term prospects.
Inflation Trends Show Positive Momentum
Perhaps the most encouraging signal emerges from inflation expectations data. Year-ahead inflation forecasts declined for the fourth consecutive month, settling at a fresh eleven-month low of 4.2 percent, down from 4.5 percent in November. This marks meaningful progress in consumer price perception.
Long-duration inflation expectations also retreated to 3.2 percent in December, matching January 2025 levels and edging down from November’s 3.4 percent. As noted by Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu, this range compares favorably to 2024 data, which fluctuated between 2.8 and 3.2 percent, and remains elevated relative to 2019-2020 readings that stayed below 2.8 percent throughout both years.
The December readings underscore persistent consumer anxiety despite inflation moderation, with sentiment improvements driven primarily by shifting expectations rather than satisfaction with current economic realities.