- Stimulus Will Kick in Later this Year: President Obama
- Lender CIT Group Hires Premier Bankruptcy Adviser
- Government Selling Bank Stakes for Too Cheap: Panel
- Buffett's Top 3 Investment Rules for Average Americans
- Market Insider: Earnings Loom in the Week Ahead
- Bulls Get Summertime Blues, But It's Hot Fun for Bears
- As Banks Fail, Strong Institutions Become More Visible
- GM IPO in Second Quarter 2010 at the Earliest: CFO

- Merrill's McCann Seen as UBS Wealth Frontrunner
- Eric Schmidt on Government Scrutiny and Economic Recovery
- Market 360: The Week's Best & Worst
- Geek Squad V. Gizmodo
- Brandt: Google Chrome OS in the Post-PC Age
- Other People Are Weirder Than We Are
- Bank Failures: Is The Nightmare Over? (Video)
- California Here I Go? No.
- Roginsky: No More Mr. Nice Guy
- Commercial Conundrum
- Job hunters swell Arkansas libraries
- Ecuadorean president demands new pipeline contract
- Cessna will return $10M to Wichita, Sedgwick Co.
- Arkansas sets sights on China rice trade
- Sales tax revenues fall sharply in Texas
- St. Joseph Regional Medical Center's CEO to resign
- Welliver's Smorgasbord in Hagerstown to keep name
- North Korean army suspected in cyber attacks
- Special alloy sleeves urged to block hackers?
NEW YORK - U.S. consumer sentiment wilted in early July to the weakest since March, when confidence in the financial sector and economy were at a low ebb, the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers showed on Friday.
Consumers' rising concerns about a protracted economic downturn, job security and erosion of wealth were the main factors depressing sentiment, the survey said.
Its preliminary index of confidence for July fell to a reading of 64.6 from the final reading for June of 70.8.
July's preliminary reading was well below economists' median forecast for 70.5 and the first fall in the index since February.
"It underlines the ongoing gloom facing the U.S. consumer and further delays prospects for a near-term recovery. That will weigh heavily on risk sentiment," said Brian Dolan, senior currency strategist with Forex.com in Bedminster, New Jersey.
After the report, stocks lost ground and the dollar extended losses against the yen, while Treasury bond prices added to gains, retesting the session highs on a safe-haven bid.
The survey's index of consumer expectations fell to 60.9 from June's final reading of 69.2.
The index of current economic conditions slipped to 70.4 from June's final reading of 73.2.
"Consumers concluded that the economic downturn would last longer and their personal finances would not recover as quickly as they had previously expected," the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers said in a statement.
Recent income gains were reported by the fewest consumers in the more than fifty-year history of the survey, the statement said.
Stocks' recent pullback has put renewed pressure on household budgets. The S&P 500 index has fallen about 4 percent so far in July.
"Consumers reported a larger negative shift in their longer term outlook for the economy. The majority of consumers thought that widespread unemployment would persist over the next five years," the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers statement said.
"People are probably unhappy with the employment situation and the increase in energy prices we saw this spring," said Gary Thayer, senior economist at Wells Fargo Advisors in St. Louis, Missouri.
Consumers are concentrated heavily on reducing outstanding debts. "Overextended finances and job and income uncertainty have made consumers much more saving minded," the Reuters/University of Michigan Surveys of Consumers statement said.



