The Stock Market Is Hitting New Highs, So Why Are Consumers Growing More Pessimistic?
Title: Why Are Consumers More Pessimistic as U.S. Stocks Hit New Highs?
Summary: The article explores the apparent contradiction between record-high U.S. stock markets and declining consumer confidence. It attributes this divergence to a "K-shaped" economic recovery, where asset owners benefit from rising prices while others suffer under inflation. The consumer confidence survey itself may be skewed due to sampling changes, now over-representing more pessimistic Democrats. However, a core issue is economic bifurcation: the top 10% of consumers now account for nearly half of all spending, masking weakening conditions for the majority. While low confidence can be a contrarian bullish signal for investors, the mechanisms driving asset gains also exacerbate pressures on the 40% of Americans without investments. The result is a deepening divide where market prosperity increasingly concentrates wealth and masks widespread financial strain.
marsbit05/28 09:35