
University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Rises 10.5% as Inflation Expectations Drop to 3.3%: What the Data Signals for Markets
The University of Michigan’s final Consumer Sentiment Index for June landed at 49.5, a 10.5% increase from May’s record-low 44.8 and the first monthly improvement after three consecutive declines. The reading came in just below the 50.0 consensus forecast from economists polled by Reuters. More consequential for market participants than the headline figure, however, was the sharp decline in long-term inflation expectations — a data point the Federal Reserve watches closely and one that carries direct implications for the trajectory of monetary policy. Five-year inflation expectations fell to 3.3% from 3.9% in May, a 0.6-point single-month drop that represents one of the steepest retreats in recent survey history. The figure was revised slightly lower from the preliminary June reading of 3.4%, signaling that the improvement deepened as the month progressed. Short-term expectations moved more modestly: the one-year inflation outlook edged down to 4.6% from 4.8%, a level that still sits well above February’s 3.4% and every comparable reading from 2024. Decomposing The Rebound: Where The Gains Came From The sub-indices offer a more granular picture than the headline. The Index of Consumer Expectations — the forward-looking component — climbed to 50.7 from 44.1, a 15% increase that accounts for the













































