The University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers on Friday released its consumer sentiment index which dropped from 71.7 in January to 64.7 in February. That’s the lowest reading since November 2023 and was weaker than the preliminary reading of 67.8.
Surveys of Consumers Director Joanne Hsu noted that while sentiment fell for both Democrats and Independents, it was unchanged for Republicans, which she wrote was reflective of “continued disagreements on the consequences of new economic policies.”
Hsu added that the current reading of inflation expectations is “now well above the 2.3-3.0% range seen in the two years prior to the pandemic.”
Over the next five years, households said they expect inflation to run at 3.5%, which was the highest since 1995 and an increase from 3.2% in January. Hsu noted that was the largest month-over-month increase in the metric since May 2021.
“For both short- and long-run inflation expectations, this month’s increases were widespread and seen across income and age groups. Inflation expectations rose this month for Independents and Democrats alike; they fell slightly for Republicans,” Hsu wrote.