March recorded Michigan sentiment at 55.5, as households’ confidence fell amid gloomier views on conditions and outlook

    by VT Markets
    /
    Mar 13, 2026
    US consumer confidence fell in early March, based on preliminary University of Michigan data. The Consumer Sentiment Index slipped to 55.5 from 56.6, versus an economist forecast of 55. The Current Conditions index rose to 57.8 from 56.6. The Expectations gauge dropped to 54.1 from 56.6.

    Inflation Expectations Mixed

    Inflation expectations were mixed. The one-year figure stayed at 3.4%, while the five-year view eased to 3.2% from 3.3%. In markets, the US Dollar stayed firm. The US Dollar Index (DXY) moved back above 100.00 and reached multi-month highs. Inflation is the rise in prices for a basket of goods and services, shown as month-on-month and year-on-year percentage changes. Core inflation removes food and fuel, and central banks often aim for about 2%. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) tracks changes in prices over time; Core CPI excludes food and fuel. Higher inflation can lead to higher interest rates, which can support a currency.

    Rates And Gold Dynamics

    Higher interest rates can reduce demand for gold by raising the cost of holding a non-interest asset. Lower inflation can have the opposite effect by easing interest rates. The drop in consumer expectations, especially the forward-looking part, signals potential weakness in spending ahead. We should consider buying put options on consumer discretionary ETFs, as households may pull back on non-essential purchases. This aligns with the latest retail sales data from February 2026, which already showed an unexpected 0.4% contraction. The US Dollar Index breaking firmly above the 100 mark is a significant technical signal, a level it struggled to hold in late 2025. This strength suggests opportunities in long dollar positions through futures contracts or call options on currency ETFs. This move puts pressure on foreign currencies, making short positions on the Euro or Yen more attractive. With one-year inflation expectations stuck at 3.4%, the Federal Reserve has little reason to consider cutting interest rates. The latest core CPI report confirmed this stickiness, holding at 3.5% year-over-year, well above the 2% target. This environment supports trades that bet on interest rates remaining elevated, such as buying puts on long-duration Treasury bond ETFs. A strong dollar and firm interest rates are a difficult combination for commodities like gold. We saw this exact dynamic play out during the rate hiking cycle that began back in 2022, where gold struggled despite high inflation. This historical precedent suggests traders should be cautious with gold and could explore shorting futures or buying puts on gold miners. Create your live VT Markets account and start trading now.

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