Updates
May 18, 2019: I just showed this to a Harvard MBA who had not seen the most recent survey. I showed him the graph below with the two ovals. He said that the survey was a "lagging indicator" and that in fact the Obama administration put this all in motion. So, there you have it. From the mouth of a(n) Harvard MBA.
So, let's take a look: google "is consumer sentiment a leading indicator or a lagging indicator?" First hit: investopedia. Confirms what I thought. However, yes, the current economy is the result of things that occurred in the past.
Original Post
The University of Michigan’s preliminary print on its consumer sentiment index rose to 102.4, up from 97.2 in April and well ahead of expectations.
Ahead of expectations. And that rise from 97.2 to 102.4 is not trivial.
The last time consumer sentiment was this high was in 2004, five years before Obama took office.
Link here.
- The University of Michigan’s preliminary print on its consumer sentiment index rose to 102.4, up from 97.2 in April and well ahead of expectations.
- “Consumers viewed prospects for the overall economy much more favorably, with the economic outlook for the near and longer term reaching their highest levels since 2004,” says Richard Curtin, chief economist for the Surveys of Consumers.
And yet the WSJ has an editorial today: Trump does not deserve credit for this economy.
Link here.
The delta between the two ovals in the graphic above is not trivial.
Of course, CNBC reminds us, it's important to note that the optimistic consumer outlook was mostly recorded before U.S.-China trade deliberations soured earlier this month.
Significant achievements of the 115th US Congress, Pelosi's house:
And we move on.
Some know nothing doofus that Trump is.
ReplyDeleteTax cut bill reduces corporate taxes and repatriate overseas profits of multinational companies, like Apple and Qualcomm. Individuals get taxes cut.
Now tariffs coming on China imports. To consumers tariffs like a tax, cushioned by 2018 and 2019 tax cuts. Corporations absorb higher component costs with their tax cuts. Tariffs force Apple and Qualcomm to relocate mfg back to America, bringing back their parked overseas profits with a small 5% tax.
Dumb as rocks that Trump.
Noted.
Delete/S
ReplyDelete