Economy

Expert Warns Over ‘Dead Cat Bounce’ As Consumer Confidence Rebounds

Consumers are still much less optimistic than this time last year.

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Consumers are still much less optimistic than this time last year.

Economy

Expert Warns Over ‘Dead Cat Bounce’ As Consumer Confidence Rebounds

Consumers are still much less optimistic than this time last year.

Share this article

British consumers are feeling a little brighter about the future as shops start to reopen, according to a closely watched measure.

Consumer confidence has rebounded slightly from near-record lows, but experts fear this could be short lived.

The GfK (Growth from Knowledge) survey’s consumer confidence score was up six points to minus 30 in the June measurement.

“This latest improvement may be misleading. Consumers appear to be confused and some are not sure what to think,” said GfK client strategy director Joe Staton.

“Yes, we have seen queues as some shoppers return to battered high streets. But with economists warning that the post-lockdown upturn might not restore GDP to pre-Covid-19 levels, and with the labour market set for more job losses, we have to question whether we are seeing early signs of economic recovery or that infamous ‘dead cat bounce’.

“Most bets will be on the dead cat.”

The bounce still leaves confidence well below the minus 13 score GfK recorded in June last year.

“We have a six-point uptick in the Overall Index Score with all measures up and particularly strong increases in future perceptions of personal finances and the economy,” Mr Staton said.

“But we still have a story that’s about negative numbers so it’s too early to say that consumers are moving on from the Covid-19 crisis.”

In April the index recorded the biggest drop in its 46-year history, from minus 9 to minus 34. Only the 1979 oil crisis came close, Mr Staton said.

The GfK index measures attitudes towards personal finance and the general economic situation, looking a year ahead and a year in the past.

It also measures consumers’ attitudes to major buys.

All measures taken into account for the survey rose in June, with major purchases and the general economic situation over the next 12 months bouncing the most.

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Expert Warns Over ‘Dead Cat Bounce’ As Consumer Confidence Rebounds

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