Consumer sentiment sours as government shutdown threatens economic damage
Source: ABC News
October 10, 2025, 10:05 AM
Consumer sentiment soured in October as a government shutdown threatens to weaken a wobbly economy beset by an uptick in inflation and a sharp slowdown of hiring, fresh data on Friday showed. The reading marked a decrease from the previous month but it came in higher than economists expected.
Shopper attitudes have worsened for three consecutive months, resuming a decline that took hold after President Donald Trump took office, University of Michigan Survey data showed. At its low point this year, consumer sentiment fell close to its worst level since an acute bout of inflation three years ago. The measure remains well below where it stood in December, before Trump took office.
Year-ahead inflation expectations ticked down from 4.7% in September to 4.6% in October, the data showed. The outcome anticipated by respondents would put inflation well above its current level of 2.9%. Long-run inflation expectations held steady from the previous month, data showed.
The data on consumer sentiment is likely to garner more attention than usual, since the government shutdown has halted closely watched releases from the federal government, including monthly jobs and inflation reports.
Read more: https://abcnews.go.com/Business/consumer-sentiment-sours-government-shutdown-threatens-economic-damage/story?id=126398088
Link to University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers (Consumer Sentiment) REPORT - Preliminary Results for October 2025


Aussie105
(7,294 posts)Stop messing about, call it what it really is - the start of a recession.
All the indicators are there.
But no MSM outlet is going to be the first to use that word.
progree
(12,428 posts)Consumer Sentiment report today, 10/10/25 (the OP also has this link)
https://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/
Source of graph: https://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/files/chicsr.pdf
As for the OP's graph (and the above graph), that was before today's (Friday's) 2.7% plunge of the S&P 500,
1.9% plunge in the DOW (879 points),
on the reignited trade war with China
The 10 year Treasury yield dropped a sizable 0.10 percentage points to 4.05% (so those of us with intermediate and long-term bonds had a gain on those).