Consumer Confidence Hits Record December Low

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ELLEN SIMON | December 30, 2008 07:44 PM EST | AP

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In this Dec. 23, 2008 file photo, Michael Moore, left, and James Carson hold a coffin outside the closed, GM Moraine Assembly plant in Dayton, Ohio. Wall Street is taking in stride a report that consumer confidence hit an all-time low in December as Americans, hearing news of thousands of layoffs, worried about their job security. (AP Photo/Skip Peterson, File)

NEW YORK — The grim outlook for the economy was affirmed Tuesday by separate reports showing consumer confidence and housing prices have plummeted to all-time lows.

Illustrating the depths of the recession, consumer confidence hit a more than 40-year low in December in the face of rising layoffs, while home prices in 10 major U.S. cities dropped in October by the sharpest amount in 21 years.

Consumers have been nervous about spending for months _ putting off big-ticket purchases, forgoing new clothes and choosing store brands at the grocery store _ all of which may make this the worst holiday season for retailers in decades.

The Consumer Confidence Index measured by the Conference Board, a private research group, fell to 38 in December from a revised 44.7 in November. That is its lowest point since the group began compiling the index in 1967, and below the previous low of 38.8 in October. Economists surveyed by Thomson Reuters had expected the index to rise incrementally to 45.

"Deepening job insecurity and falling asset prices are outweighing any optimism consumers may have derived from falling gas prices," said Dana Saporta, U.S. economist at investment bank Dresdner Kleinwort.

The unemployment rate hit a 15-year high in November, and economists expect additional job losses in the first half of 2009. Those saying in the Conference Board survey that jobs are "hard to get" rose to 42 percent in December from 37.1 percent in November, when the unemployment rate stood at 6.7 percent.

Those claiming business conditions are "bad" increased to 46 percent in December from 40.6 percent in November. Consumer spending is likely to keep dropping well into next year, Saporta said, meaning the recession will last at least into the first half of 2009.

The conditions that began the recession persist, especially deflating home prices. The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city housing index fell by 18 percent from October 2007, the largest drop since its inception in 2000. The 10-city index tumbled 19.1 percent, the biggest decline in its 21-year history.

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None of the 20 cities in the Case-Shiller index saw annual price gains in October _ for the seventh consecutive month _ and 14 of them posted record year-over-year declines. Three metro areas _ Phoenix, Las Vegas and San Francisco _ clocked in annual declines of more than 30 percent.

"The numbers are getting worse. And I think they will get quite a bit worse over the next two months because housing demand has plunged since the market went into turmoil," said Patrick Newport, an economist at IHS Global Insight.

The Federal Reserve said Tuesday it will begin purchasing up to $500 billion in mortgage-backed securities early next month in an effort to bolster the housing market. The Fed first announced that it would purchase the securities in late November but did not say when they would begin. The central bank will buy securities guaranteed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae.

Consumers have been whipsawed by home prices, the deteriorating job market and shrinking nest eggs. According to preliminary data from SpendingPulse, which tracks purchases paid for by credit cards, checks or cash, retail sales fell between 5.5 and 8 percent during the holiday season compared with last year. Excluding auto and gas sales, they fell 2 to 4 percent.

"This year is the roughest year we've had," said 35-year-old Anah Meeks, who was at Crabtree Valley Mall in north Raleigh, N.C., before Christmas mainly to get a picture of her 8-month-old son sitting on Santa's lap. "We were wondering how we were going to do it."

Meeks, who moved from Michigan in November after losing her job at a McDonald's Corp. restaurant, said she was buying her two older daughters one main present for the holidays and a few smaller items.

Major retailers are expected to report sharply lower sales than last year when they release those figures Jan. 8. Analysts expect a rash of store closings and bankruptcies from both retailers and their suppliers.

A number of stores didn't even make it to Christmas. Circuit City Stores Inc. filed for bankruptcy protection last month. It plans to keep operating, but toy seller KB Toys, which filed for bankruptcy earlier this month, is liquidating its stores and will shut down.

With credit tight and even steep discounts failing to spur spending from tapped-out consumers, economists are looking to government spending to restart the economy. Aides to President-elect Barack Obama are discussing a new stimulus package that could be as large as $775 billion.

Stocks rose despite the reading, taking heart after General Motors Corp.'s troubled financing arm received $5 billion of financing. The Dow Jones industrial average rose 184.46 to 8,668.39, while broader indexes also gained. The stock market has seen its worst year since Herbert Hoover was president, with the Dow down roughly 36 percent.

The Conference Board's Present Situation index, which measures how respondents feel about current business conditions and employment prospects, fell to 29.4 in December from 42.3 in November. It is now close to levels last seen after the 1990-1991 recession.

The current recession has deepened as companies have slashed jobs, curbed production and hoarded cash in the face of declining demand and frozen credit markets.

In 3M Co.'s quarterly update this month, Chairman and CEO George Buckley talked about how the company had closed 16 plants over the last year and a half, has been drawing down inventory and cutting capital spending.

"Is this healthy?" he said on the call. "All of us acknowledge we're collectively making the situation worse, but I think the first responsibility we have as leaders of companies is to make sure that we ensure the health and survival of our own companies first, not necessarily other people's companies, or, for that matter, the whole U.S. economy."

The Conference Board survey is based on a representative sample of 5,000 U.S. households. The cutoff date for December's preliminary results was Dec. 22.

___

Associated Press Writers J.W. Elphinstone in New York and Barbara Rodriguez in Raleigh, N.C., contributed to this report.

NEW YORK — The grim outlook for the economy was affirmed Tuesday by separate reports showing consumer confidence and housing prices have plummeted to all-time lows. Illustrating the depths of t...
NEW YORK — The grim outlook for the economy was affirmed Tuesday by separate reports showing consumer confidence and housing prices have plummeted to all-time lows. Illustrating the depths of t...
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OMG
The quote by the chairmen of 3M ........ is the perfect expression of the greed and selfishness and total lack of shared responsibility for what has happened. This person has no loyalty of any kind to America...­....... our great country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:34 AM on 01/01/2009

Hopefulle. You are right that Obama has a ever larger plan to rebuild infrastructure and put millions to work. But his program does not get at the root problem which is rebuilding our private manufacturing and agriculture sector to produce and put the millions of permanently unemployed back to work on turning this country in a new direction. Also, his acceptance and tacit support of buying toxic debt instruments to bail out the world's wealthy is a fundamental error that is undoing our currency and future, and these trillions will not help the average unemployed or.stop the bleeding of organizational bankruptcy at all levels--both private and public.
I stand by my statement that there is small discussion of the growing underclass of permanent under- and unemploy millions which is eating away at our citizentry competence and democratic capacity. We must strike out into a new direction. Obama appears to believe that cautionary economic policy for the masses is virtue while radical open invitation for free money available for the wealthy is sagacious. I see nothing but big trouble ahead.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:02 PM on 12/31/2008
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I'm shocked... SHOCKED!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 12/31/2008
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Get ready for a wild ride down!

Davidowitz estimates retailers will shutter 12,000 money-losing stores in 2009; Beemer predicted that half of today's retailers will be in big trouble -- perhaps at risk of shutting down -- next year; Freed believes 20 to 40 retail chains will go out of business in the first three months of the new year, and Niemira predicts 73,000 retail locations will close in the first half of 2009.

http://www.suntimes.com/business/1353883,CST-FIN-retail30.article

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:52 AM on 12/31/2008

Good grief. Consumer confidence is in the pits for one reason beyond any others. Everyday the media in every format tells you the end of the world is coming. So--you freeze in Walmart and don't buy clothes. Did you think a meteor would come flying through a window and hit you on your head? Turn the TV off. Sure, the bubble has burst--so learn to sew.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:45 AM on 12/31/2008
- hopefullee I'm a Fan of hopefullee 2 fans permalink
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I went to Target and couple of other discount dept. stores yesterday, because I'm in desperate need of some new clothing. I was expecting some great after-Christmas sales, but surprisingly, hardly anything was on sale. I wound up coming home with nothing because, right now, even Target-level prices seem high when items are not on sale. I don't know what the retailers are thinking.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:02 AM on 12/31/2008

Lauramae: Don't falter and no matter what happens, you still have your health and family.
Here the tax assessment rose an average of 11-14%. In the past two nights, thieves stole the wire to two units of my building. The no. 2 wire retail is worth about 200 dollars. Damages totaled a thousand.
The political leaders think essentially of their power base, the public unions and employees. The poor business man and ordinary citizen is being strippped of his last liquid assets for the benefit of bureaucractic power and political longevety. Competent leaders are no where to be found. Only a cry for more money for increased salaries, benefits and Union contracts. Not a word is spoken about plans to deal with the present predicament or coming unemployment and bankruptcy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:28 PM on 12/30/2008
- hopefullee I'm a Fan of hopefullee 2 fans permalink
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"Not a word is spoken about plans to deal with the present predicament or coming unemployment and bankruptcy­."

Um, themodernleader, did you miss the all the discussion about extending unemployment benefits, and O's plans for a large stimulus bill crate millions of jobs and jump start the economy?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 12/30/2008
- VivaZapata I'm a Fan of VivaZapata 63 fans permalink
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yet the dow was up almost 200 points today. must be that tarp money saving the gamblers' butts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:10 PM on 12/30/2008
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Nobody with even the slightest modicum of brains thinks a 200 point swing on the Dow in any direction on any given day means a darn thing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:48 AM on 12/31/2008
- markinaz I'm a Fan of markinaz 3 fans permalink

Consumer Confidence? I'm afraid that term has slipped into the oxymaroon category.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:31 PM on 12/30/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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Too true!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 PM on 12/30/2008
- helenwheels I'm a Fan of helenwheels 528 fans permalink
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We

been

r0bbed

call the P-O-L-I-C-E!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:03 PM on 12/30/2008
- Lauramae I'm a Fan of Lauramae 3 fans permalink

I'm deeply worried about my job. I work for a public university. We've been told to expect a 13-20% cut to our funding. The state legislature will haggle out the budget, along with considerations of where to cut the budget, where to put money, etc. The state's revenue is expected to be much worse because there are millions of other people like me who aren't spending money because we're worried about having a job.

I spent very little on Christmas this year, I stopped buying anything discretionary and yes, I'm buying store brands. The food prices are really high too. Apparently deflation doesn't apply there. I spend my free time looking for other job opportunities, calculating how I'll survive on unemployment and pay for health insurance, mortgage, food, etc. I can't imagine splurging on shoes or clothes, or electronics now when we have been told that there is a very real possibility that our jobs will be cut.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:56 PM on 12/30/2008
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Gee, what a surprise. Bushco exports all high-paying jobs overseas. Millions out of work. Economy runs on consumer spending. Jobless consumers unable to buy stuff. Economy collapses. No one could have predicted THAT would happen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:21 PM on 12/30/2008

besides that politicalcat, don't forget about deregulating (i.e. turn-blind­-eye-to-to­tal-malfea­sance) policies. Its funny how totally corrupt policies for decades ruin a country.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:52 PM on 12/30/2008
- WIpatriot I'm a Fan of WIpatriot 36 fans permalink
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ESPECIALLY Paulson.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:01 PM on 12/30/2008
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sorry My money went to the wall street bail out with out my permission of course

none left to spend

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 12/30/2008
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