US Consumer Sentiment Improves Slightly in Early December
By Reuters | 05 Dec, 2025
Worries about jobs and high prices persist to keep the overall mood somber despite a modest improvement from late November.
U.S. consumer sentiment improved in early December, but worries about high prices and the labor market persisted, a survey showed on Friday.
The University of Michigan's Surveys of Consumers said its Consumer Sentiment Index increased to 53.3 this month from a final reading of 51.0 in November. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the index rising to 52.
"Consumers see modest improvements from November on a few dimensions, but the overall tenor of views is broadly somber, as consumers continue to cite the burden of high prices," Joanne Hsu, the director of the Surveys of Consumers, said in a statement. "Similarly, labor market expectations improved a touch but remained relatively dismal."
The survey's measure of consumer expectations for inflation over the next year decreased to 4.1% this month from 4.5% in November. Consumers' expectations for inflation over the next five years eased to 3.2% from 3.4% last month.
(Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama )
Recent Articles
- Your Answers to These 7 Questions Will Reveal Whether You're Sane or a Closet Lunatic
- US Oil Companies Profit from Strait of Hormuz Closure Says Russian Oil CEO
- Trump Faces New Republican Resistance in Congress as Midterms Approach
- SpaceX IPO Already Two Times Oversubscribed
- SpaceX Signs Google As AI Compute Client After Landing Anthropic
- $1 Trillion in Stock Market Valuation Erased by AI Chip Selloff
- Anthropic Urges Industry Pause As AI Nears Recursive Self-Development
- Trump's South Lawn UFC Birthday Bash to Mix Politics with Punches
- Trump Policies Targeting 39 Nationalities of Immigrants Invalidated
- One Man Holds Back the World's Progress toward Green Energy Sufficiency and Prosperity
