U.S. consumer confidence fell to an all-time low in December after a moderate increase last month, a report released Tuesday said. The Conference Board, a private research group, said its index of consumer confidence for December moved to 38.0 compared with a revised reading of 44.7 in November. November’s reading was originally reported as 44.9. Below, economists react.

All the gloomy news about the economy continues to take its toll on consumer attitudes. Unlike the slight improvement in the University of Michigan’s index of consumer sentiment, the Conference Board’s index of consumer confidence reversed a modest November gain and fell slightly below October’s reading to establish a new record low. Consumers expressed great pessimism about the overall economy and in particular the job market. – David H. Resler, Nomura
Consumer assessments of the economy tumbled in December to its lowest level of the 41 years that data has been collected. Much of this weakness is due to accelerating job losses and deepening house price declines. Confidence remains deeply mired in recessionary territory, resulting in sharp declines in real consumer spending. – Steven A. Wood, Insight Economics

Most of this month’s decline was a sharp worsening of existing conditions. It plunged 12.9 points, its second largest one month decline in its history. Only at the epicentre of the first OPEC crisis did it fall more. – Brian Fabbri, Bnp Paribas

Buying plans improved slightly in December but were still quite weak( BUT GOOD NEWS). The share of people planning to buy a car within the next six months rose to 4.7% from 3.8% (the all-time low); the share planning to buy a home increased to 2.5% from 2.1% (the lowest since 1982); and the share planning to buy a major appliance increased to 26.2% from 24.5% (the lowest since 1995). – Abiel Reinhart, J.P. Morgan Chase"