(Yahoo!Finance) - Consumers aren’t doing what they say they would do — and that’s a good thing for the U.S. economy and stocks, at least for now.
There’s a lingering disconnect between how consumers feel about their finances and rising inflation and how they're actually behaving, more specifically, spending.
New proprietary data from the Bank of America Institute showed that spending on the bank’s credit and debit cards rose 11% year-over-year in March, and card spending per household was up 6.7% on an annual basis. The “hard data” reflects actual purchases as opposed to planned purchases (or lack thereof). And though some of this increase may reflect rising prices, the firm suggested purchase volume was still holding up.
“Consumers are facing headwinds from higher energy and food prices, with gas prices up almost 50% from a year ago,” said David Tinsley, senior economist for the Bank of America Institute, in a statement Wednesday. “But their balance sheets appear strong enough to weather the storm, provided it doesn’t persist too long.”
The data stands in contrast with what consumers are saying. In the “soft data” — or the qualitative measures of consumer sentiment and confidence — deterioration in the face of inflation has been much more prominent.
Perhaps one of the clearest examples has been in the University of Michigan’s closely watched Surveys of Consumers index, which fell to the lowest level since 2008 in March at 59.4. The survey respondents' commentary about their financial situations was abysmal.
“When asked to explain changes in their finances in their own words, more consumers mentioned reduced living standards due to rising inflation than any other time except during the two worst recessions in the past 50 years: from March 1979 to April 1981, and from May to October 2008,” said Richard Curtin, chief economist for the Surveys of Consumers, in the March 25 release. “Moreover, 32% of all consumers expected their overall financial position to worsen in the year ahead, the highest recorded level since the surveys started in the mid-1940s.”
By Emily McCormick · Reporter