US consumer sentiment improved more than expected in October, a final report showed today, as consumers' view of both future and current conditions improved.
The final October reading of the University of Michigan's consumer sentiment index was 93.6, up from a preliminary 92.3 and September's final reading of 85.4, said sources who saw the subscription-only report.
The median forecast of Wall Street economists polled by Reuters was for a final October reading of 92.5.
The survey's index of current conditions climbed to 107.3 in October from a preliminary 106.1 and from 96.6 in September, while consumer expectations rose to 84.8 from a preliminary 83.4 and 78.2 in September.
Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of US economic activity, but in recent years confidence measures have been a weak guide to actual spending. Consumers' expectations for inflation were virtually unchanged from September, the report said, according to the sources.
The final October reading on one-year U.S. inflation expectations was 3.1 per cent, up from a preliminary 2.9 per cent, but unchanged from 3.1 per cent in September. Median expectations for inflation over a five-year horizon were unchanged from early October at 3.1 per cent but fractionally higher than September's 3.0 per cent