U.S. Small-Business Optimism Retreats From a Four-Month High

Bloomberg

Published Jan 14, 2020 22:00

Updated Jan 14, 2020 22:27

U.S. Small-Business Optimism Retreats From a Four-Month High

(Bloomberg) -- Sentiment among U.S. small businesses unexpectedly cooled at the end of 2019 after climbing to a four-month high in November.

The National Federation of Independent Business’s index of optimism fell to 102.7 in December from 104.7 a month earlier. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a reading of 104.6. Six of the report’s 10 components declined, led by a gauge of earnings and several measures related to the labor market.

Key Insights

  • Even with the decline last month, the index finished 2019 above the two-year low of 101.2 it posted at the start of last year, indicating small companies remain upbeat about the economy’s prospects.
  • The NFIB’s measures of economic expectations and sales expectations both improved in December.
  • The report follows a mostly uneventful jobs report that implied economic growth was easing and raised concerns about wage growth stagnation.
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