By Ben Fox Rubin 
 

Consumer confidence in the U.S. declined in November, following a strong uptick in October, as sentiment about personal finance waned, Discover Financial Services's (DFS) U.S Spending Monitor reported.

The poll index, which tracks economic confidence and spending intentions of about 8,200 consumers a month, fell 2.7 points to 95.4 points in November from October.

The percentage of consumers rating the U.S. economy as good or excellent remained the same as October at 18%, up 10 percentage points from November 2011. Additionally, 51% of consumers viewed the economy as poor, an 11-point decrease from a year ago.

Consumer outlook on personal finances declined from October to November, but remained up from last year. Consumers rating their personal finances as good or excellent declined two percentage points in November from the previous month to 35%, but that amount was still two percentage points higher than last November.

Despite a decline in confidence about their personal finances, 39% of consumers have plans to increase their spending in December. This is up nine percentage points from last month and is typical of the holiday season. Overall, 12% of consumers also plan on increasing their discretionary personal spending, such as going out to dinner and the movies, up three percentage points from last month, Discover said.

Write to Ben Fox Rubin at ben.rubin@dowjones.com

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