Fearful U.S. consumers stop spending in August
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Consumers facing rising unemployment kept their spending unchanged in August even though incomes rose, according to a government report Monday that showed optimism about the economy's direction was fading.
The Commerce Department said consumer spending was flat in August after barely edging up by a revised 0.1 percent in July, a much weaker outcome than forecast by Wall Street economists surveyed by Reuters who had a 0.2 percent spending rise.
Incomes from wages and salaries and all other sources rose by 0.5 percent in August, largely reversing July's revised 0.6 percent drop and well ahead of forecasts for a smaller 0.2 percent gain.
Incomes were boosted early this year by payments made under an economic stimulus program but that has largely worn off.
"Consumers seem to have hit the foxholes," said Joel Naroff, president of Naroff Economic Advisors Inc in Holland, Pennsyvlania. Hours later, Congress rejected a proposed $700-billion (387 billion pound) bailout package for U.S. financial firms, sending a fresh jolt of fear for the future through markets.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted 777.68 points, or nearly 7 percent, to end at 10,365.45 while the high tech-laden Nasdaq Composite Index lost 199.61 points to 1,983.73, a drop of more than nine percent.
Both indexes finished well off their day's lows, hit after the shock rejection vote by the House in early afternoon.
Consumer spending on goods and services fuels about two-thirds of U.S. economic activity so the economy is widely predicted to slow in coming quarters. In the second-quarter report on gross domestic product issued last Friday, consumer spending already was revised down to a 1.2 percent annual rate from 1.7 percent and is likely to keep losing momentum. Continued...
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