2007 Proves High Consumer Confidence
The new year has brought consumers a lot more confidence than they have had in months, which proves to be good news for the housing market.
The RBC Cash Index, created by the international polling firm Ipsos, showed U.S. consumer confidence at 95.3 in January. That was up from 86.9 in December and was at its highest since February of 2006. The "expectations" index soared to 83.8 in January from 55 in December. This reading was at its highest in more than two years.
Consumers continue to feel particularly good about the job market. The January reading came in at 126.3, virtually unchanged from December's 126.5, the highest on record. "A lot of the fears people had about the economy seem to be dissipating — fears about inflation and soaring gas prices. Fears about higher interest rates and the housing bust," says Mark Vitner, an economist at Wachovia Corp.
To learn more about Real Estate in your area please contact us at Nolting Real Estate at 636-391-9997 and/or www.NoltingRealEstate.com
The RBC Cash Index, created by the international polling firm Ipsos, showed U.S. consumer confidence at 95.3 in January. That was up from 86.9 in December and was at its highest since February of 2006. The "expectations" index soared to 83.8 in January from 55 in December. This reading was at its highest in more than two years.
Consumers continue to feel particularly good about the job market. The January reading came in at 126.3, virtually unchanged from December's 126.5, the highest on record. "A lot of the fears people had about the economy seem to be dissipating — fears about inflation and soaring gas prices. Fears about higher interest rates and the housing bust," says Mark Vitner, an economist at Wachovia Corp.
To learn more about Real Estate in your area please contact us at Nolting Real Estate at 636-391-9997 and/or www.NoltingRealEstate.com

