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US consumer confidence explodes to the highest level since 2000

The index rose to a new high after President Donald Trump's election.

A man checks out a Trump cake ahead of the rally for Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump in New York City, New York, U.S. November 8, 2016.

US consumer confidence spiked to a 16-year high in March, according to the Conference Board's monthly survey.

The headline index jumped to 125.6, the highest since December 2000. Economists had forecast that the index dipped in March to 114.0 from a 15-year high of 114.8, according to Bloomberg.

Consumers were more positive about the labor market and economic conditions. The share of people who expected jobs to be plentiful also jumped to a 16-year high.

The Conference Board's index rose to a new high after President Donald Trump's election, alongside other gauges of consumer confidence that showed renewed optimism. Business owners' confidence also spiked following Trump's promises to scale back regulations and cut corporate taxes.

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What other surveys have shown, in addition, is that feelings about the economy are split along party lines, with Republicans suddenly turning super-bullish and Democrats becoming bearish after the presidential election.

All these are part of so-called soft data that have improved since the election. Hard data that measure actual economic activity, not just expectations, have been more mixed.

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