November 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

Keep up with the latest economic data and headlines from Truist.

Our take

Softer labor data and cooler inflation figures allowed the Fed to cut in October, but timing of the next move is less certain.

Regardless of a deal to end it, the government shutdown is the longest on record and is causing a logjam in the real economy. For instance, by the time these items are restarted, the shutdown will have delayed for essentially two months, federal workers’ paychecks and the release of key economic data—from retail and new home sales to trade data and wholesale prices. In the case of consumers, there’s a real impact in the direct delay of incomes, but also an indirect loss of income for private service sector workers that depend on the spending of those federal employees, such as restaurants, hairdressers, dry cleaners, etc.

In the interim, privately sourced economic data has been the stand-in that’s provided a window into the economy during the shutdown. Although the Federal Reserve (Fed) made a quarter-point rate cut (0.25%) in October after signs of a softer labor market and easing inflation, recent public comments suggest the Fed will likely wait for a more complete economic picture from its usual data sources before deciding on the next move.

Controlling inflation is a key Fed policy priority, after inflation-driven price spikes over the past few years and in anticipation of tariff effects on imported goods price levels. The September Consumer Price Index (CPI) report showed that inflation had cooled compared to August. The biggest price reductions in September were in food, vehicles, and auto insurance, which more than offset increases in energy and apparel. Still, the report showed signs of upward price pressure, particularly in import-dominated categories: apparel jumped 0.7%, the largest monthly jump in a year, while fresh tomato prices remained high following a new 17% tariff on imports from Mexico.

Full employment is the second part of the Fed’s dual mandate. When considering the October cut, the state-level weekly jobless claims figures, which continued to be released by their respective labor agencies, supported the notion that the labor market remained stable but soft, a view relayed by Chairman Powell. Private data, while mixed, provided additional clues about the labor market. For instance, payroll data from Revelio, which is closely correlated with Bureau of Labor Statistics measures, revealed September payroll gains revised downward, with October showing the second decline in the past six months. ADP payroll data indicated that private payrolls were up after a 4-month soft patch. Outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas showed layoffs spiking in October, the highest monthly amount in 2025. The mixed data from the various sources supported the view of a soft labor market.

Consumer sentiment continued its four-month long slide, slipping to 50.3, which was barely above the cycle low of 50.0 in June 2022 and was the lowest level since May. Inflation worries persist, although one-year expectations dropped slightly to 4.6%. Job losses, higher prices, personal finances, and the government shutdown were cited by respondents. One-year inflation expectations rose 0.1% to 4.7% while lower term inflation expectations fell slightly to 3.6%, the first decrease in four months. Affordability may be at the root of customer sentiment. Auto affordability dropped as the number of weeks of wages needed to purchase a new vehicle rose to 37.4.  Limited supply has hurt housing affordability, pushing prices up in many markets and limiting the impact that near-term Fed rate cuts can have on mortgage rates to provide meaningful relief for borrowers.


Bottom line:

The U.S. economy continues to muddle along. Expect that government economic data production coming online will add more clarity on where the economy stands and what we can expect. Fed Chair Jerome Powell was clear in stating that a December rate cut was “far from” a foregone conclusion—expect the Fed to continue to move cautiously.

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.2% MoM in September, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for September. Also, rents rose 2.6% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.3% and the lowest since early ’21.Disclosure 1

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 rose by approximately 2.3%, primarily driven in a few large-cap tech and AI stocks.Disclosure 2 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yields up again on inflation worries. Rate volatility should persist.Disclosure 3

Negative

Federal funds rate: The Fed cut rates again in October, but Fed Chairman Powell pushed back on the notion that another cut in December was “far from” a foregone conclusion. Markets are split on December.Disclosure 4

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Rose, snapping a 4-week up streak. Higher rates reduce affordability.Disclosure 5

Inflation*: Consumer prices (YoY CPI) rose to 3.0%. Producer prices (PPI) not released due to Government shutdown.Disclosure 6

Manufacturing: Contracted for an 8th month. The prices paid component ebbed for 5th time in 6 months but is still elevated and signals prices are rising.Disclosure 7

Housing: Existing home sales up 1.5% but single-family prices down for third straight month.Disclosure 8 Data not available for new housing sales, new housing starts, and new housing permits.

Consumer sentiment: On a 4-month slide and down to lowest since June 2022. One-year inflation expectations rose to 4.7%, but the longer term fell to 3.6%.Disclosure

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability hit its lowest level since December 2024. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle increased to 37.4 weeks.Disclosure 10

Neutral

Services: Activity jumped to 8-month high, but the prices paid component rose to 70.0, the highest reading since October 2022.Disclosure 7

Back to office: Held steady at 54.8, (pre-pandemic indexed to 100). The trend has improved and appears to be slowly grinding higher, but remains about half of pre-pandemic levels, which is a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 11

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*Indicators impacted by U.S. federal government shutdown.

NOTE: GDP, Wages, Jobs, Business Inventories data not released due to government shutdown.