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WASHINGTON – U.S. consumer confidence fell sharply in August, the Conference Board said Tuesday.

The consumer-confidence index fell to 99.6 in August from a revised 107.0 in July, the sharpest drop since Hurricane Katrina battered the Gulf Coast.

The index is at its lowest level since last November, when confidence was recovering from the hurricanes.

The fall in August was sharper than expected. Economists expected the index to drop to 102.7 from the initial estimate of 106.5 in July.

Stocks turned decisively lower but mustered a small gain on the day.

Bond yields rose. Yields on the benchmark 10-year note fell to 4.79 percent after the release of the minutes of the Fed’s Aug. 8 interest-rate policy meeting showed policymakers felt slower growth would cure worrisome inflation.

“Less favorable business conditions coupled with a less favorable job scenario” were the driving forces for the confidence drop, said Lynn Franco, director of the Conference Board Consumer Research Center.

“Looking ahead, the glass remains half-empty as consumers are growing increasingly pessimistic about the short-term outlook,” Franco said.

Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said “the expectations index is now so low that it is consistent, if sustained at its August level, with real consumers’ spending rising at a year-over-year rate of only 2 percent or so. Ouch.”

Consumers are worried about home prices and lost wealth, said Bill Hampel, chief economist for the Credit Union National Association. “Consumers will have to restore their balance sheets the old-fashioned way: by saving,” he said.

Other economists said they were not worried about the consumer.

“As always, we should concern ourselves most with what consumers are doing, not what they are saying. We appear to be on track to post the reacceleration in real consumer spending in the third quarter that we have been calling for, notwithstanding the dip in attitudes in August,” said Steve Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital.

In August, the present-situation index fell to 123.4 from 134.2, while the expectations index slipped to 83.8 from 88.9.

The decline in confidence came despite a drop in gasoline prices in the month. Gas prices are down 11 cents since Aug. 1.

Consumers’ overall assessment of the economy was significantly less favorable in August. Those claiming conditions are “good” fell to 26.1 percent from 27.3 percent. Those claiming conditions are “bad” rose to 16.7 percent from 15.0 percent.

The outlook for the labor market was also less favorable.

Consumers saying jobs are “plentiful” fell to 24.4 percent from 28.6 percent. Those claiming jobs are “hard to get” increased to 21.1 percent from 19.6 percent in the previous month.

Consumers expect more inflation over the next year. Inflation expectations over the next 12 months rose to 5.5 percent in August from 5.1 percent in July. This is the highest level since last October.



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AP-NY-08-29-06 1731EDT


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