|
The Conference Board
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence
Index Declines
April 24, 2007
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence
Index, which had decreased in March, retreated further in April.
The Index now stands at 104.0 (1985=100), down from 108.2 in
March. The Present Situation Index decreased to 131.3 from 138.5
in March. The Expectations Index declined to 85.8 from 87.9.
The Consumer Confidence Survey is based on
a representative sample of 5,000 U.S. households. The monthly
survey is conducted for The Conference Board by TNS. TNS is the
world's largest custom research company. The cutoff date for
April's preliminary results was April 17th.
Says Lynn Franco, Director of The
Conference Board Consumer Research Center: "Unlike the decline
in March, which was solely the result of apprehension about the
short-term outlook, this month's decline was a combination of
weakening expectations and a less favorable assessment of
present-day conditions. Rising prices at the gas pump continue
to play a key role in dampening consumers' short-term
expectations. The decline in the Present Situation Index — the
first decline in six months — warrants monitoring in the months
ahead, as further declines would suggest a softening in growth."
Consumers' appraisal of current-day
conditions was less positive in April. Those claiming conditions
are "good" declined to 26.5 percent from 28.6 percent. Those
saying conditions are "bad" edged up to 15.0 percent from 14.5
percent. Consumers were also less upbeat about labor market
conditions. Those saying jobs are "hard to get" rose to 20.4
percent from 18.9 percent. Those claiming jobs are "plentiful"
decreased to 27.8 percent from 30.3 percent in March.
Consumers continue to view the short-term
outlook with a degree of caution. Those anticipating business
conditions to worsen in the next six months rose to 10.2 percent
from 9.8 percent. Consumers expecting business conditions to
improve decreased to 13.5 percent from 14.5 percent.
The outlook for the labor market did not
change significantly. Consumers expecting fewer jobs in the
months ahead dipped to 15.7 percent from 16.0 percent. Those
anticipating more jobs to become available edged up to 12.9
percent from 12.7 percent. The proportion of consumers expecting
their incomes to increase in the months ahead declined to 17.0
percent from 18.0 percent in March.
The next release is scheduled for May 29,
Tuesday at 10 A.M. ET.
|
DOL most recent numbers
April 24, 2007
| Consumer
Price Index: |
+0.6% |
March 2007 |
| Unemployment
Rate: |
4.4% |
March 2007 |
| Payroll
Employment: |
+180,000(p) |
March 2007 |
| Average
Hourly Earnings: |
+$0.06(p) |
March
2007 |
| Producer
Price Index: |
+1.0(p)% |
March 2007 |
| Employment
Cost Index: |
+0.8% |
4th Qtr 2006 |
| Productivity: |
+1.6% |
4th Qtr 2006 |
| Unemployment
Initial (UI) Claims: |
339,000 |
Apr 14 2007 |
| UI Claims
4-Week Average: |
328,750 |
Apr 14 2007 |
|