US Consumer Sentiment Slips Again in September
By Reuters | 12 Sep, 2025
Concerns about rising inflation due to tariffs weigh heavily on consumer sentiment.
A woman shops for lettuce at the Mid-Ohio Market at Norton, a modern food pantry designed to replicate a grocery store experience, in Columbus, Ohio, U.S., May 13, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein/File Photo
U.S. consumer sentiment fell for a second straight month in September as consumers saw rising risks to business conditions, the labor market and inflation.
The University of Michigan's Surveys of Consumers on Friday said its Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 55.4 this month, the lowest since May, from a final reading of 58.2 in August. Economists polled by Reuters had been expecting a reading of 58.0, little changed from the month before.
"Consumers continue to note multiple vulnerabilities in the economy, with rising risks to business conditions, labor markets, and inflation," Joanne Hsu, the director of the Surveys of Consumers, said in a statement.
"Likewise, consumers perceive risks to their pocketbooks as well; current and expected personal finances both eased about 8% this month. Trade policy remains highly salient to consumers, with about 60% of consumers providing unprompted comments about tariffs during interviews, little changed from last month."
The survey's measure of consumer expectations for inflation over the next year was unchanged at 4.8% this month. Consumers' expectation for inflation over the next five years rose to 3.9% from 3.5% last month.
Households have generally been downbeat about the economy over the course of 2025 on concerns that President Donald Trump's aggressive tariff measures will cause goods prices to rise and eat into their purchasing power.
(Reporting by Dan Burns, Editing by Nick Zieminski)
Recent Articles
- Samsung to Invest $648 Billion, Mostly Outside Seoul Region
- Sanjay Mehrotra's Micron Overtakes Meta, Tesla in Market Value
- Lackluster S. Korea Suffers Embarrassing 0-1 Loss to S. Africa
- China's Carmakers See Canada as 'Practice Run’ for US Sales
- China's Z.ai Closes Frontier Gap with US AI Leaders
- China Targets Solar, Wind Power Producing Half of Electricity by 2030
- US Automotive Quality Increased Industrywide Last Year
- US Consumer Inflation Topped 4.0% in May As Consumer Spending Stays Strong
- Wealthy Nations Reap Huge Benefits from Immigration, Study Finds
- Oil Back to Pre-War Levels as Hormuz Traffic Rebounds As Iran Asserts Control
