February 2026

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

2026 is off to a solid start with steady growth, an upside surprise in job growth, and relatively stable inflation. While we still don’t have a complete picture due to the economic data disruption during the fall government shutdown, there are positive signs in manufacturing and services gauges, and personal income along with improved consumer sentiment that offer promise for the months ahead.

The job market continues to provide the stability the economy needs with steady hiring, layoffs, and participation. The January labor report showed a surprising increase of 130,000 jobs, although gains were concentrated in health care and construction, while federal government and financial activities lost jobs. The employment rate slipped to 4.3%. Annual benchmark revisions lowered the job gains during all of 2025 to a seasonally adjusted 181,000, or just 15,000 per month.

Inflation hasn’t gone away but seems benign for now. It’s above the Fed’s target of 2%, after staying in a range between 2.5% and 3.0% throughout 2024 and 2025. The risk of geopolitical events or aftereffects of tariff resets upsetting inflation still lingers.

Solid consumer spending and a boost from net exports have supported gross domestic product (GDP) levels recently. Manufacturing expanded in January, halting 10 months of contraction as seven of the ten subcomponents grew. We expect U.S. growth to rise to 2.5% in 2026 thanks to tax incentives for consumers and businesses, marginally lower borrowing costs, steadier trade policy and tariffs, and continued investment in AI and technology spending.

Given a stabilization in labor markets over the past months, at its January 28th meeting, the Federal Reserve (Fed) chose to pause further rate cuts. We didn't expect any changes at that meeting, especially since the Fed had already cut rates by a total of 1.75% over the past 18 months, including at each of the three prior meetings. Looking ahead, we maintain our view that the next rate cut will be in the spring as the Fed continues heading towards 3% over the course of 2026.

President Trump tapped Kevin Warsh to be the next Chair of the Fed. Warsh is a straightforward, traditional choice combining Wall Street, White House, and Fed Governor experience over his career. He’s been known as an inflation hawk in the past and critical of the growth of the Fed’s balance sheet, a result of quantitative easing. As a qualified candidate, we don’t expect any issues with his nomination process.

Bottom line:

The U.S. economy remains resilient. But with data muddied by the government shutdown, we likely won’t get a clear read until late February or early March. Expect an uptick in U.S. growth during 2026 to 2.3% thanks to four primary drivers – tax incentives for consumers and businesses, marginally lower borrowing costs thanks to Fed easing, steadier trade policy and tariffs, and continued investment in AI and technology spending.

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose just 0.1% MoM in December, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.4% for December. Rents rose 2.2% 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 1.36% in January.Disclosure 4 The 10-Year Treasury Bond Yield fell slightly to 4.20% from a week ago, ending a three-week increase streak. We expect rate volatility to persist.Disclosure 5

Personal Wages: Missed the consensus of 0.4%, but still strong; it has only declined once since January 2022.Disclosure 8

Services: Unchanged, though expanded for the 19th month. But the prices paid component ticked higher to 66.6, up 4.9 points from a year ago.Disclosure 11

Manufacturing: Halted 10-month contraction. But the prices paid component rose to a reading of 59.0, a four-month high.Disclosure 11

Jobs: Unemployment was unchanged at 4.3%. Monthly jobs rose by a surprising 130,000 in December, but revisions lowered 2025 job gains to a seasonally adjusted 181,000, only 15,000 per month.Disclosure 3

GDP: Revised up 0.1% during 3Q2025 to 4.4%. Growth was driven by strong consumer spending at 3.5%, well above the pre-COVID trend, and an outsized 1.62-point boost from net exports as imports stayed weak.Disclosure 8

Negative

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Up fractionally to 6.11%. Higher rates reduce affordability.Disclosure 2

Federal funds rate: 3.50 – 3.75%. Fed paused in January after cutting at 3 straight meetings. Markets don’t expect another rate cut until the spring. Warsh is new Fed pick.Disclosure 6

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability was essentially unchanged since October 2025. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle is 36.2 weeks.Disclosure 9

Neutral

Inflation: Consumer prices (CPI) were up 2.7% YoY, matching a 6-month low. Producer prices (PPI) YoY rose 2.7%, pushed by higher energy and food prices.Disclosure 3

Consumer sentiment: Popped to 6-month high as near-term inflation expectations fell sharply, down to 3.5%--a 13-month low.Disclosure 7

Housing: Existing home sales rose for the third straight month as single-family prices fell for the fourth time in five months. New housing starts dropped 4.6% as multifamily plunged 25.9%, but single family starts rose as did multifamily permits.Disclosure 10

Back to office: Rebounded to 55.9 following drop due to Winter Storm Fern. The trend appears to be steadily improving. Still, it’s nearly 60% of pre-pandemic levels, which is a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 12

Business Inventories: Up again in November. Longest stretch without a decline since 2022.Disclosure 13

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