会议理事会信心指数三月份在战争中意外跳升。
Conference Board Confidence Unexpectedly Jumped Amid War In March

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/conference-board-confidence-unexpectedly-jumped-amid-war-march

尽管对战争和油价上涨持续存在担忧,但会议委员会的消费者信心指数在三月份意外*增加*,从91.0升至91.8。这主要得益于消费者对*当前*情况的看法显著提升(123.3),尽管对未来的预期略有下降(70.9)。 消费者信心因人口统计数据而异。35岁以下的年轻消费者仍然最乐观,而55岁以上的人最不乐观。千禧一代是唯一报告信心有所改善的一代人,而Z世代、婴儿潮一代和其他人的乐观情绪有所下降。 有趣的是,消费者信心的上升与*增加*的通胀预期和持续恶化的劳动力市场趋势同时发生。消费者仍然主要关注物价和生活成本,调查期间对战争和油价的提及激增。政治倾向对信心水平的影响不大。

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原文

Despite war (and rising gas prices) now on respondents' minds (the survey period for preliminary results was March 1 to 24), it is perhaps surprising that The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence rose more than expected in March (from 91.0 to 91.8), considerably better than the 87.9 expected.

Even more intriguing, the Present Situation rose from 120.0 to 123.3 (118 exp) while Expectations fell from 72.0 to 70.9 (68.4 exp)

Source: Bloomberg

Among demographic groups, confidence on a six-month moving average basis continued to moderate in March for consumers under age 35 and 55 and over, and virtually unchanged after a multi-month decline for those aged 35 to 54.

Respondents under 35 remain the most optimistic and those 55 and over the least.

On a six-month moving average basis, Generation Z remained the most confident among all generations, but their optimism slipped in March along with the Silent Generation, Baby Boomers, and Generation X.

Only Millennials cited improved confidence in the month. By income, confidence on a six-month moving average basis continued to dip in six of eight income groups.

Only consumers earning $25,000-34,999 and $125,000 and over were somewhat more optimistic.

Oddly, with the rise in optimism, inflation expectations surged higher...

Source: Bloomberg

And even more surprising, the weakening labor market trend continued...

Source: Bloomberg

“Consumers’ write-in responses on factors affecting the economy continued to skew towards pessimism. Comments about prices and the cost of goods suggest that the cost of living remained at the top of consumers’ minds. As the war in Iran overlapped significantly with the survey sample period, comments about oil/gas and war/conflict spiked, while specific mentions of trade and tariffs decreased notably," noted Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist, The Conference Board.

Consumer confidence by political affiliation was little changed.

Republicans remained the most optimistic, while confidence was substantially lower among Independents and the lowest among Democrats.

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