2026-4-25 14:10 |
US consumer sentiment has hit a record low, collapsing to 47.6 in April. That reading is the lowest in the University of Michigan’s 74-year survey history, deeper than pessimism recorded during the 2008 crisis or COVID pandemic shutdowns.
Economists blame the ongoing war with Iran, surging energy costs, and persistent inflation for the historic drop. The preliminary reading fell 10.7% from March, with every demographic group and index component registering declines across income, age, and political lines.
Inflation Expectations Spike as Oil Prices ClimbOne-year inflation expectations jumped to 4.8% in April, a full percentage point above March’s reading. That figure marks the highest forecast since August 2025, according to the University of Michigan survey team.
Long-run inflation expectations also climbed to 3.5%, the highest reading since October 2025. Vanguard economists described the shift as a classic stagflationary shock. They linked it directly to the energy price surge from the Iran conflict.
Oil prices have driven transportation and food costs higher across the board. Household budgets now face mounting pressure as grocery bills and gasoline receipts continue to climb.
Treasury yields responded quickly to the data release. Investors priced in a slower pace of Federal Reserve rate cuts through the summer, reflecting entrenched inflation risk and mounting economic uncertainty.
BREAKING: Consumer sentiment in the US officially hits its lowest level on record amid the Iran War.
This marks the weakest consumer sentiment since data collection began in 1978. pic.twitter.com/jwyuXlSvNl
Nearly 27% of US consumers have cut discretionary spending. An Ernst & Young Parthenon survey shared by the Kobeissi Letter flagged the pullback. Households are prioritizing essentials like food, medicine, and rent over non-essential purchases.
The sentiment collapse spans all political affiliations, income brackets, age groups, and education levels. That universality has alarmed analysts who view sentiment as an early indicator of household spending behavior.
Historically, weak sentiment precedes reduced consumer spending, which accounts for roughly 70% of US economic activity. The Federal Reserve now faces growing pressure to balance inflation risk against slowing growth.
Crypto markets have felt the strain indirectly. Bitcoin slipped below $66,000 during the war’s peak, though the asset has since clawed back losses as ceasefire hopes improved risk appetite.
President Donald Trump announced a fragile ceasefire with Iran shortly after most survey responses were collected. Whether that agreement holds could determine if May’s reading recovers or falls further.
The coming weeks will test whether asset markets, including the K-shaped crypto market, can decouple from deteriorating household confidence.
The post US Consumer Sentiment Hits Record Low Amid Iran War appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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