Business February consumer confidence posts biggest drop since 2021 in latest sign of slowing economy - You voted for this

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PUBLISHED TUE, FEB 25 202510:05 AM EST UPDATED 21 MIN AGO
Jeff Cox


KEY POINTS
  • The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index slipped to 98.3 for the month, down nearly 7% and below the Dow Jones forecast for 102.3. It was the largest monthly drop since August 2021.
  • The Expectations Index tumbled 9.3 points to a 72.9 reading, the first time since June 2024 that the measure has fallen below the level consistent with recession.
No Eggs.WEBP
Empty shelves of eggs are seen in a supermarket in the Manhattan borough of New York City on Feb. 20, 2025.

Consumers grew more pessimistic about the economic outlook in February as worries brewed about a slowing economy and rising inflation, the Conference Board reported Tuesday.

The board’s Consumer Confidence Index slipped to 98.3 for the month, down 7 points and below the Dow Jones forecast for 102.3. This was the lowest reading since June 2024 and the largest monthly drop since August 2021.

“Views of current labor market conditions weakened. Consumers became pessimistic about future business conditions and less optimistic about future income,” said Stephanie Guichard, the board’s senior economist for global indicators. “Pessimism about future employment prospects worsened and reached a ten-month high.”

The decline in consumer confidence comes with President Donald Trump threatening additional tariffs against U.S. trading partners. Trump said Monday that duties against Canada and Mexico “will go forward” in March after a delay in February.

Economists worry that the tariffs could spark another round of inflation at a time when the Federal Reserve is considering whether to lower interest rates further or hold steady as policymakers weigh the impact of Trump’s aggressive fiscal and trade policy moves.

Consumer are worried as well: 12-month inflation expectations jumped to 6%, up from 5.2% the prior month and well ahead of the Federal Reserve’s 2% goal.

“This increase likely reflected a mix of factors, including sticky inflation but also the recent jump in prices of key household staples like eggs and the expected impact of tariffs,” Guichard said. “There was a sharp increase in the mentions of trade and tariffs, back to a level unseen since 2019. Most notably, comments on the current Administration and its policies dominated the responses.”

“We should expect some short-term behavioral shifts within the consumer,” wrote Jeffrey Roach, chief U.S. economist at LPL Financial. “Consumers are increasingly nervous about the unknow impacts from potential tariffs and could pull forward consumer demand as they anticipate higher prices for imports in the near future.”

Stocks briefly moved lower following the release while Treasury yields added to a sharp slide on the day. The 10-year Treasury yield, a traditional barometer for growth expectations, fell nearly 10 basis points, or 0.1 percentage point, to 4.29%.

Though most economic indicators reflect continued growth, the Conference Board gauge matches other recent surveys showing waning confidence. Last week, the University of Michigan reported a larger-than-expected monthly decrease of nearly 10% in February while the five-year inflation outlook among respondents hit its highest level since 1995.

In the Conference Board survey, the decline came across age groups and income levels. The survey covered the time period up to Feb. 19.

Along with the overall drop in confidence, the Expectations Index tumbled 9.3 points to a 72.9 reading, the first time since June 2024 that the measure has fallen below the level consistent with recession. However, the current conditions measured improved somewhat, with 19.6% saying conditions are “good,” up 1.1 percentage points from January.

However, a closely watched measure of the labor market saw a worsening, with 33.4% saying that jobs were “plentiful” while 16.3% said positions are “hard to get.” That compared to respective readings of 33.9% and 14.5% in January.
 
It’s the basic principle that if restaurants are failing the issue is either a business’s personal ability to stay above debt or it’s the consumer not being able to afford a meal. I’ve watched dining prices nearly double in the last year in my entire area.

Economically it’s hard to pinpoint multiple points of fluctuation but on a macro scale this indicates that the food service industry is not the only one lagging but energy and agriculture. It helps to think of restaurants being the front end of this production cycle. In a healthy economy a middle class family with children can go out to eat once or twice a week. In a recession that same family will only be able to go out once every other week.

I’m sorry if this is confusing to talk in a broad scale like this. There are plenty of economic indicators tied to foodservice https://restaurant.org/research-and-media/research/restaurant-economic-insights/economic-indicators/
You're pressing a False dichotomy, as there can be multiple different factors that can be outside of only 2 possible factors. Have you considered additional restaurants opening in your area that can be affecting pricing? I know for a fact that a local Chipotle opened by me locally and it has been affecting the local beaner restaurants. Can you provide any sort of evidence that on a whole, like state records or local papers reflecting citing this trend? It would be hasty generalization otherwise. Causation doesn't imply Correlation, and if it did can you provide any sort of evidence to back up your claim? It's sort of like how I hear in academic circles that the introduction of porn magazines have seen a positive correlation of crime, but that doesn't infer that porn magazines is causing the crime increase. You're oversimplifying economic cycles, what if these middle class families decided to prioritize giving kids Fortnite money in exchange to just eating home, or better yet DoorDash? Also, providing a link to a website indicates to me that you see this as some sort of Appeal to Authority, as well as shifting the burden of proof onto me to do this research and come to the same biased claim that you are seeking for me to believe in.

Unfortunately for you, I'm a academic retard, so I ask again: Any sort of local primary sources to back your claims?
 
I’m not going to spoon feed you. It’s impossible to determine what the price fluctuation is when both supply and demand drop, that’s basic economics if you’re an academic you should know that. Competition wasn’t even brought up in the conversation but if we’re going to talk about price equilibrium in the industry it’s skyrocketing due to logistics cost and the lack of benefit to suppliers in giving the little man a fair shake for his dollar to deliver some wheat.
 
Unfortunately for you, I'm an academic retard, so I ask again: Any sort of local primary sources to back your claims?
I wonder if you’d apply this same intellectual rigor if this news piece came out from Fox News while Biden was still in charge. Would you be so demanding of verification from random kiwi shitposters? Just thinking out loud.
 
I wonder if you’d apply this same intellectual rigor if this news piece came out from Fox News while Biden was still in charge. Would you be so demanding of verification from random kiwi shitposters? Just thinking out loud.
Nice Whataboutism, I actually do when it comes to publishing journals for I/O psych. Also, this is just basic Epistemology. Are you familiar with Epistemology?
 
Nice Whataboutism, I actually do when it comes to publishing journals for I/O psych. Also, this is just basic Epistemology. Are you familiar with Epistemology?
Whoa how pragmatic of you to mention epistemology that’s like all encompassing bro. You’re like totally wise about antidisestablishmentarianism and stuff. Do I sound smart yet to an academic midwit like you?
 
Whoa how pragmatic of you to mention epistemology that’s like all encompassing bro. You’re like totally wise about antidisestablishmentarianism and stuff. Do I sound smart yet to an academic midwit like you?
Only a nigger would try to use big words to sound intelligent, after being called out and being gunt guarded by your kissing homie. I will keep asking this though:

Any sort of local primary sources to back your initial claims?
 
Only a nigger would try to use big words to sound intelligent, after being called out and being gunt guarded by your kissing homie. I will keep asking this though:

Any sort of local primary sources to back your initial claims?
Of what? The principles of front loading a recession or how food service is an indicator for consumer sentiment? Those are both pretty basic assumptions Einstein you shouldn’t need much foundational information to understand that. I would like you to show me the contrary since you seem so discontent in the face of common sense. You do know what stagflation is right?
 
Whoa how pragmatic of you to mention epistemology that’s like all encompassing bro. You’re like totally wise about antidisestablishmentarianism and stuff. Do I sound smart yet to an academic midwit like you?
That's a lot of words to admit you got nothing and are making shit up.
I hope for your own sake that you are a troll.
 
Of what? The principles of front loading a recession or how food service is an indicator for consumer sentiment? Those are both pretty basic assumptions Einstein you shouldn’t need much foundational information to understand that. I would like you to show me the contrary since you seem so discontent in the face of common sense. You do know what stagflation is right?
Ad hom'ing? Woah buddy! Only real niggers like you can only ad hom once the jig has been casted aside. The very fact that I tilted you so hard goes to show that you are an emotional worm and you're appealing so hard to it. Also, strawman fallacy.

Again, I will press the question: Any sort of local primary sources to back your initial claims?
 
Ad hom'ing? Woah buddy! Only real niggers like you can only ad hom once the jig has been casted aside. The very fact that I tilted you so hard goes to show that you are an emotional worm and you're appealing so hard to it. Also, strawman fallacy.

Again, I will press the question: Any sort of local primary sources to back your initial claims?
Yeah. Pick up an economics textbook. Here, for you; it’s on the house: https://online.hillsdale.edu/courses/promo/economics-101-the-principles-of-free-market-economics

Do you want that shit in APA nigga?
Reductio ad absurdum, prove the contrary with your primary sources or gtfo.
 
At this point, you're deliberately moving goalposts and are resorting to using authority to source your argument, which won't stop me from asking the exact same question:

Any sort of local primary sources to back your initial claims?
Do you have to ask colleagues for sources when writing a paper? That kinda sad man I can see now why you’re a psychologist. Always gotta ask the obvious instead of rubbing two brain cells together. I know a neuropsychologist and he’s a real woo woo midwit.

Show me the contrary since you wish to disprove my statement. That should be easy for you if you have any efficacy.

It’s interesting to have an argument that’s circular to the null point of asking proofs.
 
Do you have to ask colleagues for sources when writing a paper? That kinda sad man I can see now why you’re a psychologist.
Yes, and that's not just for psych; if you're writing any paper for engineering or research you have to cite sources. Just because I do journal's for IO psych also doesn't mean that was a career choice I made, it's a bonus hustle. Keep seething that I have less messages than you within a span of 7-8 years, I'm going to keep asking you this question:

Any sort of local primary sources to back your initial claims?
 
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