By on September 24, 2008

True dat. “The Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia announced that the consumer confidence indicator increased 8 percentage points month-on-month in September to reach its highest level since August 2007.” Meanwhile, here in the U.S., “The customer is telling us that their head is in a completely different place than in April when gas went above $3.50 per gallon. Their heads are right now where, ‘I’ve got to be more careful and I feel like I have less wealth,’ and that brings the whole industry down.” Sorry we missed that little bit of Cheech and Chongism from FoMoCo’s Marketing Guy Jim Farley [via Reuters]. But even if Farley seems a little lost in the [blue] clouds, the man’s not wrong. The current U.S. financial meltdown is hardly likely to encourage the average American consumer to run down to his local car dealer and sign-up for a three to (gulp) six-year loan. And even if they felt so inclined, as Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress, “The intensification of financial stress in recent weeks, which will make lenders still more cautious about extending credit to households and business, could prove a significant further drag on growth.” Bailout bucks notwithstanding, with gasoline shortages and the prospect of recession looming, the U.S. car market has hit the wall. “Economic activity appears to have decelerated broadly,” Bernanke warned, with British-quality understatement. If you don’t know it now, wait ’til TTAC reports September’s new car sales results…

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9 Comments on “Consumer Confidence Surges. In Slovenia....”


  • avatar
    mocktard

    I have a great deal of morbid fascination about just how far this rabbit hole will go. Keep posting, TTAC, and I’ll keep refreshing.

  • avatar
    Point Given

    It’s the 96 month finance fools that are placing head between legs and kissing butt goodbye re: future spending.

    It’s time to ask the more big picture question; Is this the 1929 crash for modern times?

    Cheap credit became stupid credit which has become defaults, decline of paper wealth, the inevitable decline of actual wealth,

    How many times has it been said..Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it

  • avatar

    mocktard:

    I have a great deal of morbid fascination about just how far this rabbit hole will go.

    You and me both kiddo.

  • avatar
    Stephan Wilkinson

    Ahah! Point Given asks the very question I keep to myself, about the 1929 crash, but at the same time feel is the 800-pound gorilla. Oh, wait, I see by clicking on the photo that it’s actually the 1,500-pound moose…

  • avatar
    RogerB34

    “The current U.S. financial meltdown is hardly likely to encourage the average American consumer to run down to his local car dealer and sign-up for a three to (gulp) six-year loan.” The reason the average dummy will not run down and take on a car debt is that they are tapped out. To the max revolving credit card debt and non revolving credit such as for automobiles. Fed Reserve reports average loan for autos 2008 $25,500. Loan to Value 95 percent. America the Bankrupt.
    No President has been able to “manage” the economy. Neither will President Obama.

  • avatar
    Landcrusher

    The more I learn, the more I believe we are looking at another mild recession, not even close to a depression. Now, if you work on Wall Street, you might feel differently.

    The combo of the Bush administration and Congressional Democrats let this happen to us, and they could fix it easily, and with little pain. The question is will they.

  • avatar
    joeaverage

    Mild recession? Good. Then we can skip the bailout package.

  • avatar
    Pig_Iron

    1. Slovenia has moose?

    2. “If you don’t know it now, wait ’til TTAC reports September’s new car sales results…”
    – Is that the day GM’s 100th b-day party ends?

  • avatar
    Stephan Wilkinson

    Moose are everywhere, usually called elk. One of the most ubiquitous animals in the world, probably.

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