NEW YORK (AP) — Rising prices at the gas pump and in grocery aisles are starting to crimp shoppers' outlook.
The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index fell sharply from a three-year high in February, reversing five straight months of improvement. The decline raises questions about Americans' ability and willingness to spend in coming months.
The index fell more than expected to 63.4 from a revised 72.0 in February. Economists expected 65.4, according to FactSet. The drop was the steepest since the 10.1-point plunge from January 2010 to February 2010, when the U.S. stock market was hammered by worries about Greece's national debt.
"Rising food and gasoline prices are starting to take their toll on the consumer psyche, and Japan's triple calamity — earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster — has been very unsettling," said Chris Christopher Jr., senior principal economist at HIS Global Insight.