The Federal Reserve's latest consumer survey shows near-term inflation expectations easing even as American households report their worst financial outlook since 2022.
The Federal Reserve's latest consumer survey shows near-term inflation expectations easing even as American households report their worst financial outlook since 2022.

The Fed's one-year inflation expectations dipped to 3.46% in June, but the improvement was overshadowed by the worst household financial outlook since 2022, creating a mixed signal for policymakers weighing whether to hike rates.
"Households are seeing some relief on near-term inflation expectations, but their personal financial outlook has deteriorated significantly, which complicates the narrative that the economy is running too hot," said Collin Martin, head of fixed income research and strategy at the Schwab Center for Financial Research.
The New York Fed's Survey of Consumer Expectations showed one-year inflation expectations falling to 3.46% from 3.64% in the prior month. Three-year expectations held steady at 3.1%, while five-year expectations remained at 3%. The survey's measure of household financial conditions dropped to its lowest level since 2022, pointing to growing consumer anxiety about personal balance sheets even as the labor market remains strong.
The data arrives as bond markets increasingly price in the possibility of a Fed rate hike by December, with the two-year yield touching 4.18% last week — the highest since February 2025 — after a blowout jobs report showed openings surging 4.6% to 7.6 million in April. The Fed's next policy decision is scheduled for June 17-18, with the fed funds rate currently at 5.25% to 5.5%, unchanged since July 2023.
Inflation Expectations vs. Financial Reality
The decline in one-year inflation expectations marks the first meaningful drop in months, offering a potential data point for Fed Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues who have argued that elevated inflation remains transitory. Yet the persistence of three- and five-year expectations at 3.1% and 3%, respectively — well above the Fed's 2% target — suggests longer-term inflation psychology has not yet normalized.
"The bar for a rate hike is falling," Martin said on Bloomberg Television. "If we look at it strictly in a vacuum, the case can be made for a hike right now. We have inflation that's been high for five years and counting and moving in the wrong direction."
The household financial outlook reading adds a complicating layer. Consumer sentiment has deteriorated as elevated borrowing costs, still-high prices for essentials and geopolitical risks weigh on Americans' assessment of their own finances. The last time the survey's household conditions index was this low was in 2022, when inflation was peaking above 9%. That deterioration matters for the economic outlook because consumer spending accounts for roughly two-thirds of U.S. gross domestic product — a sustained pullback in household confidence could slow growth even if the labor market remains strong.
Market Pricing Shifts Toward Hike Scenario
Overnight index swaps now price roughly a 35% probability of a quarter-point rate increase by the December meeting, up from near zero a month ago, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The shift accelerated after the May jobs report showed nonfarm payrolls exceeding expectations and the JOLTS survey revealing 7.6 million job openings — the highest in almost two years.
Ten-year Treasury yields surged to 4.55% last week, a two-week high, while the policy-sensitive two-year yield hit 4.18%. The S&P 500 still managed to notch a record close at 7,609.78, reflecting the market's ongoing struggle to reconcile resilient corporate earnings with a hawkish Fed pivot. WTI crude oil finished at $93.51 a barrel, up 1.46%, as supply concerns from restricted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz added to inflation pressures.
Economists Christina Romer and David Romer, in a recent paper reviewing the Powell Fed, warned that policymakers risk missing the "bigger picture" on inflation if they focus too narrowly on transitory factors. "To most economists — ourselves included — Chair Powell is a hero," they wrote, but cautioned that vigilance is needed to keep inflation expectations anchored. The Romer paper serves as a reminder that the Fed's credibility on inflation — hard-won after the 1970s — depends on acting before expectations become unmoored, not after.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.