The University of Michigan reported that consumer sentiment rose by approximately 9% this month, largely fueled by a cooling in gasoline prices that provided immediate relief to household budgets. Joanne Hsu, director of the Surveys of Consumers, noted that the improvement was broad-based, cutting across demographics and political affiliations. Lower-income households reported the most significant gains, reflecting their heightened sensitivity to fuel costs.
Gold Stagnates as Consumer Sentiment Outperforms Expectations
Spot gold fluctuated near $4,200 per ounce on Friday as investors digested fresh economic data showing a surprise uptick in U.S. consumer sentiment. While the University of Michigan’s preliminary June index reached 48.9, beating consensus forecasts, broader concerns over persistently elevated inflation kept market gains in check.

Despite the positive shift, the economic outlook remains historically fragile. Sentiment levels are still 19% lower than they were a year ago, with consumers wary that inflationary pressures could prove stubborn. Reflecting this, year-ahead inflation expectations dipped slightly to 4.6% from 4.8% in May—a figure that remains substantially higher than the 3.4% recorded in February 2026. Following the 10 a.m. EST release, spot gold slipped 0.38% to trade at $4,195.48 per ounce, underscoring the market's cautious reaction to the mixed economic signals.


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