December 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

As 2025 winds down, what we might see in 2026 is coming into focus—although still clouded by the aftereffects of the economic data embargo during the government shutdown. We anticipate economic growth to rise modestly, though inflationary pressures and tariff uncertainty continue to cast a shadow over the outlook.

We expect an uptick in gross domestic product (GDP) from 1.8% in 2025 to 2.2% in 2026 driven by four factors:

  • Stimulus for consumers and businesses from tax incentives in the One Big Beautiful Bill (OBBB).
  • More Federal Reserve (Fed) easing translating into marginally lower borrowing costs.
  • Steadier trade policy and tariffs, including ratcheting down rhetoric with China, Canada, and Mexico – our three largest trading partners.
  • Ongoing technology & AI spending remain a strong tailwind for economic growth.

The catchup in economic data – backlogged because of the government shutdown – will tell us more in the coming months. Yet, that data flow will come in uneven bursts over the next few weeks, which means we won't get a clean read on the economy until early 2026.

As to other economic fundamentals that the Fed watches closely, inflation likely heads higher in the near term as tariffs continue to creep into imported goods prices, but we don’t expect a reprise of 2021 and 2022. The unemployment rate continues to drift slowly higher, but not in a troublesome fashion, due to softer conditions. Meanwhile, continued tight labor supply help should keep a lid on the unemployment rate and maintain wage growth, which is ultimately a net benefit for economic growth.

Although consumer sentiment remains sour, it has improved recently and halted a multi-month slide. Inflation expectations moderated as well. Record-setting sales and the number of shoppers reported for Black Friday and Thanksgiving shopping signal customers feeling good enough about the economy to keep spending.  While they are being selective, favoring online deals over retail shopping, spending is not limited to upper-income shoppers. Despite slower wage growth, depleted savings, and persistent cost pressures, lower-income consumer spending is still increasing—just not as rapidly as the upper end.

There are still risks, including slower/sluggish global growth in China and Europe/UK. Tariff uncertainty and volatility in freight, inventory, and sales continue to distort economic data. A laundry list of challenges remains including simmering geopolitical tensions, sluggish global growth, and a U.S. housing market that’s structurally impaired by high home prices.

The Fed’s recent and anticipated moves, including the December rate cut, mean that short-term (1-month to 3-year) yields should keep falling, easing borrowing costs for small businesses and consumers and mitigating employment risks. We expect longer-term rates to modestly decline as well, though fiscal and trade policy concerns will keep them relatively sticky, dampening relief for home borrowing costs and auto loans.

Bottom line:

The U.S. economy remains resilient, while continuing to navigate uncertainty from the government shutdown and limited economic data. Be prepared that we probably won't get a clean read on the economy until early 2026. With the Fed having moved forward to shore up the employment market with December’s cut, all eyes will be on the inflation numbers as we move through 2026.

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.2% MoM in October, 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 was up 0.13% though with significant volatility.Disclosure 2 10-year U.S. Treasury bond yields sharply reversed, jumping to the highest since early November. We expect continued rate volatility.Disclosure 3

Personal Wages: Stil strong; have only declined once since January 2022.Disclosure 4

Services: Activity climbed to 9-month high, but the prices paid component rose to 70.0, the coolest reading in eight months.Disclosure 5

Negative

Manufacturing: Contracted for the 9th month. But the prices paid component rose to 58.5, although the pace has cooled over the past seventh months.Disclosure 5

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Fell for a second week. Lower rates improve affordability.Disclosure 6

Inflation: Consumer prices (YoY CPI) rose to 3.0%. Producer prices (PPI) YoY rose 2.7%.Disclosure 7

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability continued at its lowest level since December 2024. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle increased to 36.43 weeks.Disclosure 8

 

Neutral

Federal funds rate: After cutting rates in October, Fed minutes show most voters were opposed to a December cut going into the December meeting. But markets expected a reduction and got one.Disclosure 9

Consumer sentiment: Halted a four-month slide. One-year inflation expectations fell to 4.1%, while longer-term expectations ticked down to 3.2%.Disclosure 10

Housing*: Existing home sales up 1.2% MoM, but single-fam prices rose, halting a 3-month slide.Disclosure 11 Data is delayed for new housing sales, new housing starts, and new housing permits.

Back to office: Jumped to 59.2, (pre-pandemic indexed to 100). The trend appears to be steadily improving, but remains nearly 60% of pre-pandemic levels, which is a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 12

Business Inventories: Flat in August but July was revised downward to a rise of 0.1%.Disclosure 13

Jobs: Unemployment rose by 0.1% to the highest level since October 2021. Monthly jobs increased in September, but downward revisions to previous months pulled the six-month average down to 58,500.Disclosure 7

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

NOTE: GDP data not released due to government shutdown.