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US June Consumer Confidence Drops to 91.2 Missing Expectations, Labor Market Concerns Rise to Multi-Year High

2026-07-01

The latest announced US Q2 2026 (June) consumer confidence index recorded 91.2, showing a decline from the previous value of 93.1, and falling short of the market consensus of 94.4. Although the latest official report noted that the previous value was significantly revised downwards, causing June to show a slight uptick on the baseline, according to DataTrack's raw data, the overall figure is still significantly worse than expected. This indicates that consumption momentum under an environment of high prices and high interest rates has not yet shown a significant reversal.

This month's data presented a divergent pattern of "present situation falling, expectations rising." The present situation index, representing the sentiment towards the current economy and employment, dropped sharply by 3.0 points to 116.4, hitting a new low since February 2021. Conversely, the expectations index, reflecting the outlook for the next six months, rose against the trend by 3.0 points to 74.4, but still remains below 80, the historical warning line signaling potential economic recession risks.

The improvement in consumer expectations mainly benefited from external positive factors. Dana M. Peterson, Chief Economist at The Conference Board, stated that influenced by the extension of the US-Iran ceasefire agreement, the recent drop in oil prices moderately alleviated consumers' inflation fears. However, foreign institutions such as Bloomberg pointed out that the real cooling of the labor market is quickly eroding the public's confidence in the present situation; the proportion of respondents who believe "jobs are hard to get" jumped to 22.5% this month, reaching a new high since January 2021.

In the short term (1-2 months), the decline in oil prices does provide a buffer for real purchasing power and is expected to support the fundamentals of consumer staples. However, in the medium term (3-6 months), expectations for the labor market will be the key bellwether; if the pessimistic sentiment that "jobs are hard to get" spreads, it may further suppress discretionary spending and cause the expectations index to linger below the recession warning line for an extended period. Investors should closely monitor whether the subsequently released non-farm payroll data further confirms the cooling of the labor force.

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