Cebr And YouGov: Consumer Confidence Stalled Ahead Of The Budget
Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay
For the second month in a row, the YouGov/Centre for Economics and Business Research (Cebr) Consumer Confidence Index saw little movement. The overall index fell from 111.0 to 110.9 (-0.1). Any score greater than 100 indicates positive sentiment, less than 100 indicates negative sentiment.
While the overall index saw barely any change, there were some fluctuations in individual metrics. Household finance measures for the past 30 days slightly deteriorated from 93.4 to 93.2 (-0.2), but this was accompanied by an uptick in outlook of +1.4 points from 95.2 to 96.6 (+1.4). This may have something to do with September’s reported slowdown in inflation.
It's a similar story with job security: there was negligible movement in the retrospective measure – from 97.9 to 98.0 (+0.1) – and a more noticeable improvement in the forward-looking measure from 115.1 to 116.2 (+1.1).
Business activity measures in October were an exception: the picture is more negative than it was a month earlier. Scores for the past 30 days fell by 1 point from 112.7 to 111.7, while scores for the year ahead fell by 2 points from 126.2 to 124.2.
Both retrospective house price measures, which declined from 116.1 to 116.0 (-0.1), and outlook, which declined from 131.4 to 131.2 (-0.2) nudged slightly downwards in October.