My comment: No change, not much to comment.

:)

We live a temporary period of calm. Yet CCI is low enough to monitor
it monthly. However, sentiment seems to be released through individual
criminal actions, it does not create any collective atmosphere to
release it. At least not yet.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

http://www.conference-board.org/economics/ConsumerConfidence.cfm

The Conference Board Consumer Confidence Index™, which had declined
sharply in February, was flat in March. The Index now stands at 26.0
(1985=100), up from 25.3 in February. The Present Situation Index
declined to 21.5 from 22.3 last month. The Expectations Index
increased to 28.9 from 27.3 in February.

The Consumer Confidence Survey™ is based on a representative sample of
5,000 U.S. households. The monthly survey is conducted for The
Conference Board by TNS. TNS is the world’s largest custom research
company. The cutoff date for March’s preliminary results was March
24th.

Says Lynn Franco, Director of The Conference Board Consumer Research
Center: "Consumer Confidence was relatively unchanged in March, after
reaching an all-time low in February (Index began in 1967). The
Present Situation Index suggests that the overall state of the economy
remains weak and that more job losses are on the horizon. Apprehension
about the outlook for the economy, the labor market and earnings
continues to weigh heavily on consumers' attitudes. Looking ahead,
consumers remain extremely pessimistic about the short-term future and
do not foresee a turnaround in economic conditions over the coming six
months."

Consumers' assessment of overall present-day conditions remains
unfavorable. Those claiming business conditions are "bad" rose to 51.1
percent from 50.5 percent, while those claiming business conditions
are "good" edged down to 6.8 percent from 7.0 percent last month.

Consumers' appraisal of the labor market was somewhat more pessimistic
in March. The percentage of consumers saying jobs are "hard to get"
increased to 48.7 percent from 46.9 percent in February, while those
claiming jobs are "plentiful" was unchanged at 4.6 percent.

Consumers' short-term outlook was moderately less negative this month.
Consumers expecting business conditions will worsen over the next six
months edged down to 39.1 percent from 40.7 percent, while those
anticipating conditions to improve increased to 9.1 percent from 8.5
percent in February.

The employment outlook was also moderately less pessimistic. The
percentage of consumers expecting fewer jobs in the months ahead
decreased to 42.6 percent from 47.0 percent, while those expecting
more jobs edged up to 7.1 percent from 6.8 percent. The proportion of
consumers expecting an increase in their incomes declined to 7.5
percent from 7.9 percent.


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