US Consumer Confidence Fell Sharply in November
The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index® declined by 6.8 points in November to 88.7 (1985=100) from 95.5 in October. The Present Situation Indexbased on consumers assessment of current business and labor market conditionsfell by 4.3 points to 126.9. The Expectations Indexbased on consumers short-term outlook for income, business, and labor market conditionsfell by 8.6 points to 63.2. The Expectations Index has tracked below 80 for ten consecutive months, the threshold under which the gauge signals recession ahead. The cutoff for preliminary results was November 18, 2025.
Consumer confidence tumbled in November to its second lowest level since April after moving sideways for several months, said Dana M Peterson, Chief Economist, The Conference Board. All five components of the overall index flagged or remained weak. The Present Situation Index dipped as consumers were less sanguine about current business and labor market conditions. The labor market differentialthe share of consumers who say jobs are plentiful minus the share saying hard to getdipped again in November after a brief respite in October from its year-to-date decline. All three components of the Expectations Index deteriorated in November. Consumers were notably more pessimistic about business conditions six months from now. Mid-2026 expectations for labor market conditions remained decidedly negative, and expectations for increased household incomes shrunk dramatically, after six months of strongly positive readings.
Among demographic groups, confidence continued to improve for consumers under 35 years old, but confidence for consumers age 35 and older dipped, with respondents 55 and over remaining the most downbeat this year. By income, confidence fell for nearly all cohorts after several months of increasing confidence for most groups. Consumers earning less than $15K was the only income bracket in which confidence improved in November but remained the least optimistic among all income groups. Confidence fell among consumers of all political stripes, with the sharpest retreat among independent voters.

More at:
https://www.conference-board.org/topics/consumer-confidence/index.cfm