Energy costs could hit holiday spending
In a survey by the Consumer Federation of America (CFA) and Credit Union National Association (CUNA), 35 percent of respondents said they planned to spend less this year. That number was up from 32 percent last year and represents the biggest decline since the survey was first conducted eight years ago.
Of those who said they would spend less, 38 percent - compared to 32 percent last year - blamed the rising cost of gasoline and heating oil.
"It is noteworthy how frequently consumers cited rising energy costs as a reason they plan to cut back their holiday spending, far more frequently than they cited general family finances," CUNA Chief Economist Bill Hampel said in a statement.
"They are clearly quite concerned about the escalating price of gasoline and home heating oil," he added.
Surprisingly, despite record foreclosures and a national credit crunch, fewer consumers said they were concerned about making monthly payments on mortgages and loans. The survey said 40 percent were concerned about making these payments, down from 43 percent last year.
The percentage of consumers worried about paying off credit card balances from holiday related spending dropped to 24 percent from 33 percent last year.
"The good news is that a declining percentage of Americans express concern about paying off consumer and mortgage debt," said CFA Executive Director Stephen Brobeck.
"The bad news is that these percentages are relatively high, especially for moderate-income and minority Americans," he said.
·Gold Up on High Oil Prices, We
·Steel Stumbles A Bit, But Stil
·SECTOR WATCH: Oil Service Stoc
·Weaver Popcorn Halts Use of Ch
·Union Is Key Topic of Smithfie
·Coors creates high-end beer un
·Injured W.Va Workers File $60M
·InBev's 2Q Profit Surges 27 Pc
·White House Hopefuls Love Iowa
·CME Group Purchases 159 CBOE E
·Detroit Hopes to Reinvigorate
·Gold Prices Ease As Dollar Mak
·U.S. Natural Gas in Storage Gr
·Starbucks Stores to Open in A&
·InBev's 2Q Profit Surges
·Ag Secretary Wants Lower Incom
·Organic Milk Supplier Must Red
·Energy Midday Roundup: Gas in
·EU Regulators Approve UK Biofu
·28 Trapped in Ukraine Mine; 70
·Gas prices near 1981's inflati
·Oil climbs above $95 on U.S. d
·Oil Prices Rise to Mid-$94 a B
·Stocks up, oil gains boost ene
·Oil climbs toward $95 on U.S.
·OPEC summit ends in division o
·OPEC agrees dollar talks after
·BHP suspends Angola ops after
·Gold Getting Crossed Off Gift
·AGP Rejects Bank's 2nd Takeove
·Wheat, Soybeans Decline on CBO
·Report: Rio Tinto eyes answer
·$100 fill-up coming to pump ne
·Oil Steadies on Tight Fundamen
·Chavez Sees Ecuador As OPEC Al
·Okla.: Producers, Regulators t
·Agricultural Futures Trade Mix
·USDA Found Flaws in ConAgra Sa
