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The Conference Board
Consumer Confidence Index Improves Moderately in December
December 27, 2007
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index, which
had been declining since the summer, posted a slight increase in December.
The Index now stands at 88.6 (1985=100), up from 87.8 in November. The
Present Situation Index, however, decreased to 108.3 from 115.7 in November.
The Expectations Index rose to 75.5 from 69.1.
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 December's preliminary results was
December 18.
Says Lynn Franco, Director of The Conference Board
Consumer Research Center: "This month's slight gain in Confidence was due
solely to an increase in the Expectations Index. Consumers' short-term
outlook regarding business conditions, employment, inflation and stock
prices improved marginally. However, while consumers are less negative about
the near-term future, they remain far from optimistic. Furthermore,
persistent declines in the Present Situation Index indicate the economy is
still losing momentum. In fact, in assessing the current job market,
pessimists now outnumber optimists. Regarding business conditions, the gap
between the two is almost nonexistent."
Consumers' appraisal of present-day conditions
continues to paint a dismal picture. Those claiming conditions are "good"
decreased to 20.3 percent from 22.5 percent. Those saying conditions are
"bad" increased to 20.0 percent from 18.9 percent. Consumers' assessment of
the job market was also less positive. Those saying jobs are "hard to get"
rose to 23.5 percent from 21.4 percent, while those claiming jobs are
"plentiful" declined to 22.7 percent from 23.3 percent in November.
Consumers' short-term expectations, while reversing a
four-month slide, remain at levels that bear watching. Those expecting
business conditions to worsen in the next six months decreased to 14.1
percent from 16.6 percent. Those anticipating business conditions to improve
increased to 13.8 percent from 12.4 percent.
The outlook for the labor market was also less
pessimistic. The percent of consumers expecting more jobs in the months
ahead inched up to 11.2 percent from 10.6 percent, while those anticipating
fewer jobs edged down to 19.9 percent from 22.8 percent. The proportion of
consumers expecting their incomes to increase in the months ahead decreased
to 19.0 percent from 19.4 percent.
The next release is scheduled for Tuesday,
January 29, at 10 A.M. ET.
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DOL most recent numbers
January 14, 2008
| Consumer
Price Index: |
+0.8% |
Nov. 2007 |
| Unemployment
Rate: |
5.0% |
Dec. 2007 |
| Payroll
Employment: |
+18,000(p) |
Dec. 2007 |
| Average
Hourly Earnings: |
+$0.07(p) |
Dec.
2007 |
| Producer
Price Index: |
+3.2(p)% |
Nov.2007 |
| Employment
Cost Index: |
+0.8% |
Qtr 3 2007 |
| UI Claims
4-Week Average: |
338,750 |
Dec 8, 2007 |
| Productivity: |
+6.3% |
Qtr 3 2007 |
| Unemployment
Initial (UI) Claims: |
322,000 |
Jan. 5 2008 |
| (UI)
Claims:4-Week Average |
341,000 |
Jan. 5 2008 |
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