April 2026

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

The Iran conflict continues alternating between escalations and negotiations as the Mideast searches for a path to peace. The conflict has already done substantial damage to the global economy, and its shadow hangs over the domestic economic picture. For now, the U.S. is holding up, albeit with inflation well above ideal levels and labor markets pressured.

From a price and global supply perspective, the damage has been done to the global economy by the conflict. Between the 800 million barrels of crude oil that should have passed through the Strait of Hormuz since the Iran War started, the time needed to restart wells, and the damage to pipelines, refineries, and oil fields across the Persian Gulf, the impact on the global energy supply will linger for the remainder of this year and likely into next. Since 90% of the U.S. energy supply is sourced within North America, it’s the secondary impact through global supply chains and the global economy that will be more dramatic and lasting.

The conflict’s immediate effect has been on inflation, reversing the progress made by food prices and waning tariff impacts. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) in March jumped 0.9%. That’s the largest monthly increase since the Russia-Ukraine invasion in 2022 and represents a rise of 3.3% from a year ago. Energy jumped 11.3% year over year, while transportation services rose 4.1% as airfares soared 14.9%. Core CPI, which excludes food & energy, rose 0.2% in March and increased 2.6% on a year-over-year basis. Evidence of tariffs has crept into import-dominated categories like furniture, motor vehicle parts, footwear, and tires.

U.S. payrolls added 178,000 in March, nearly three times larger than the consensus expectation for 65,000. However, the February tally was revised sharply lower (to -133,000 from -92,000). Still, the six-month average rose to 14,833 from -1,000. The details remain mixed—wage growth cooled, hours worked slipped, but the unemployment rate improved. In short, the choppy back-and-forth gain-loss trend extended to 10 months.

Consumer spending, up 1.9% during the quarter and now 69% of total gross domestic product, continues as a key prop for the economy. Of concern is consumer sentiment, with the University of Michigan Monthly Consumer Sentiment Index plunging to 47.6 in March, the lowest on record dating back to 1978. Survey respondents blamed the Iran conflict for unfavorable changes in the economy and for their increased level of concern about inflation.

The mixed economic picture with an underwhelming but stable job market and inflationary flareups from the Iran conflict will likely keep the Federal Reserve (Fed) sidelined in the near term. Despite evidence of a sour vibe, it’s resilient consumers who will likely help the U.S. economy power through its challenges

Bottom line

Global energy damage is already done. Restarting the disrupted global oil flow—from transport, production, and damaged infrastructure—will take months. As a result, the U.S. will be buffered but still exposed to global economic spillovers. This will keep the U.S. economy feeling like it has one foot on the gas—driven by fiscal stimulus—and one foot on the brake, reflecting trade and tariff uncertainty, underwhelming job growth, and now the Iran situation.

 

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index was flat MoM in February, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for February. Rents rose 1.8% from a year ago, also below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.3% and the lowest since the COVID months.Disclosure 1

Personal Wages: Fell for the first time since May of last year but still up 4.6% YoY.Disclosure 2

Services: Dipped in March but extended to a 21st straight month of expansion. The prices paid component jumped to 70.7, the highest level since 2022.Disclosure 3

Manufacturing: Highest level since August 2022, but the prices paid component also jumped, hitting its highest reading since June 2022.Disclosure 3

GDP: Growth for 4Q2025 revised downward to 0.5%. Federal spending dropped 16.7% during the quarter. Consumer spending rose 1.9%, slightly below the pre-COVID trend, but still solid.Disclosure 2

Business inventories: Haven’t risen in three months after December revised down.Disclosure 4

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability improved for a second month on strong income growth. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle declined to 35.4 weeks.Disclosure 5

Negative

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Fell this week, halting a five-week streak of increases. Higher rates reduce affordability.Disclosure 6

Federal funds rate: 3.50 – 3.75%. The Fed held steady at its March meeting and still sees a rate cut this year. Markets now see one rate cut in ‘26. Warsh is new Fed pick.Disclosure 7

Housing: Existing home sales rose 1.7% MoM while prices increased 0.8% after three months of decline. New home sales plunged 17.6% MoM due to bad weather across most of the U.S. New housing starts was revised downward to 4.8%. New building permits down 4.7% as single-family fell 0.6% but multi-family down 12.4%.Disclosure 8

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 finished March with a -5.1% decline from February. Disclosure 9 The 10-Year Treasury Bond yield dipped and then regained to finish the week at 4.31%. We expect rate volatility to persist.Disclosure 10

Jobs: Unemployment rate dipped to 4.3%. Monthly jobs back-and-forth gain-loss trend over past 10 months. Private payrolls have added 52,500 on average in the past 6 months.Disclosure 11

Inflation: Consumer prices (YoY CPI) were up 3.3% and Producer prices (PPI) YoY rose 3.4%, pushed by higher services, energy and food prices.Disclosure 11

Neutral

Consumer sentiment: Crashed to an all-time low. One-year expectations soared to 4.8% from 3.8%, while long-term inflation expectations rose to 3.4%.Disclosure 12

Back to office: Slipped to 52.2 from 54.6 in the prior week. The trend appears to be steadily improving at nearly 60% of pre-pandemic levels, which is a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 13

Want more insights?

Take a deeper dive into the latest market and economic conditions with detailed analysis from our economists and thought leaders.