June 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

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

Our take

U.S. economy muddling through tariff turbulence

Trade and tariffs have seemingly been the only story during the past few months. Alas, the U.S. economic data continues to jostle about due to tariffs – or as we’re referring to it, “hurry up and wait.” Growth accelerated in March and April as consumers and business attempted to front run tariffs; this is the “hurry up” part. Indeed, consumers rushed to buy goods that they believe will be negatively impacted by tariffs – everything from cars to smartphones. (In mid-April, tariffs were temporarily paused on certain electronics, including smartphones, laptops, and televisions.)

Meanwhile, the main inflation gauges show very little impact from the tariffs, which has helped markets rebound from the sharp downdraft in March and April and has kept them mostly climbing since. However, we don’t expect that this trend will persist, particularly as increased tariffs begin to bleed into prices. Many companies rushed to fill their foreign orders ahead of the tariffs, which is clearly reflected in the freight data for February, March, and April. Consequently, we believe that many of the goods sold through mid-May—when the price surveys were conducted for the two main inflation gauges—were filled from pre-tariff inventories. Given the on-again/off-again nature of the tariffs, some companies have yet to adjust prices. As those pre-tariff inventories are depleted, we anticipate pricing for newly received goods will reflect the tariffs.

While we foresee prices increasing in the coming months, we don’t anticipate massive, widespread price increases. Companies will continue to adapt to the price changes and will adjust prices accordingly. With all imported steel and aluminum tariffs doubling to 50% regardless of origin, we may see higher new vehicle prices along with automakers experiencing higher production costs and disruptions in supply chains. That’s already starting to impact the new vehicle affordability index, which declined sharply in April. On a positive note, we’re beginning to see the stubbornly grim consumer sentiment thaw somewhat.

Hence, the U.S. remains in a “muddle-through” environment—where growth has slowed but not stalling. While that’s hardly pro-growth, it doesn’t suggest doom and gloom either. Instead, it likely keeps the Federal Reserve (Fed) in “wait & see” mode for the for several more months, including at the June meeting.

Choose from the tabs below to get the details on economic trends.

Positive

Jobs: Rose 139K in May, pulling down the 6-month average down to 157K, which is now under the pre-COVID average. The unemployment rate is at 4.2%, which is roughly flat for 11 months.Disclosure 1

Wages: Above expectations again and up 3.9% compared to a year ago.Disclosure 2

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.2% in April, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for April. Also, rents are up 3.3% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.3%.Disclosure 3

Negative

GDP: Revised upward to -0.2% from -0.3%. A spike in imports due to tariff front-running wiped out growth in 1Q25, while the pace of consumer spending slowed considerably from 4.0% in 4Q24 to 1.2%.Disclosure 2

Federal funds rate: The Fed will likely hold rates at the June meeting. Markets now see cuts starting in September or October, and maybe only one this year.Disclosure 4

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Down a tick week over week. Higher rates hurt home affordability.Disclosure 5

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 surged 6.15% in May, bringing its return for 2025 to 0.51%.Disclosure 6 Bond yields dropped recent weeks but rose with a jump in crude oil after the attacks on Iran. Rate volatility will likely persist.Disclosure 7

Manufacturing: Contracted for the third month in a row. The prices paid component ebbed to 69.4, near the highest level since June 2022.Disclosure 8

Services: Contracted in May, snapping a 10-month expansion streak. The prices paid component jumped to 68.7, its highest since late 2022.Disclosure 8

Housing: Existing home sales fell 0.5% to a 7-month low, although prices rose. New home sales rose 10.9% MoM—mostly concentrated in the Midwest. New housing starts increased 1.6% as multi-family jumped 10.7%.Disclosure 9

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability declined sharply in April to the worst level since December. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle Increased to 37.3 weeks.Disclosure 10

Neutral

Inflation: Food prices edged upward, but gasoline fell 1.0% during May. Wholesale prices rose 2.4% from a year ago.Disclosure 1

Business inventories: Flat in April after climbing for three consecutive months.Disclosure 11

Back to office: Increased to 54.3, a new post-COVID high (pre-pandemic indexed to 100). The trend has improved and remains about half of pre-pandemic levels, which is a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 12

Consumer sentiment: Recovered, but inflation concerns remain high on tariff worries. One-year inflation expectations are at 5.1%.Disclosure 13

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