US Consumer Confidence Jumps Most in Four Years on Trade Truce

US consumer confidence rebounded sharply in May from a near five-year low as the outlook for the economy and labor market improved amid a truce on tariffs.

The Conference Board’s gauge of confidence increased by 12.3 points to 98, marking the biggest monthly gain in four years. The figure exceeded all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

A gauge of consumer expectations for the next six months surged by the most since 2011, while a measure of present conditions climbed as well, data released Tuesday showed. The improvement in confidence was broad across age and income groups as well as political affiliations, with the strongest gains among Republicans.

The cutoff for the survey was May 19, after the US and China agreed to temporarily reduce high levies on each other’s goods while they negotiate a trade deal. About half the responses were collected after the agreement was reached on May 12, according to a statement.

“The rebound was already visible before the May 12 US-China trade deal but gained momentum afterwards,” Stephanie Guichard, senior economist at The Conference Board, said in the statement.

The gauge’s improvement may be an indication that worries about tariffs — a key source of anxiety in the previous surveys — abated in recent weeks. However, President Donald Trump has since renewed threats to increase levies on other countries and products.