May 2026

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

The fragile Middle East cease-fire is largely holding, with U.S. crude oil prices slipping below $100 per barrel. Yet, the stable-to-improved economic data that has emerged since the onset of the Iran War illustrates that the United States is powering through the uncertainty and damage to the global economy caused by the conflict.

Economic growth, as measured by gross domestic product (GDP), has stayed strong. Business investment was the biggest contributor, surging to a 6.2% annualized growth rate in the first quarter. AI and technology investment remain key drivers, while improving corporate earnings reinforce the positive outlook. Consumer spending has stayed resilient thanks to stable employment trends, tax refunds up 17.8% from a year ago, and contained tariff pressures.

It appears that the jobs growth trend has improved, including the first back-to-back monthly gains in a year in March and April, along with the upshifts in the six-month averages for overall job growth and private payrolls. Additionally, hours worked rose, while the unemployment rate was unchanged at 4.3%, and wages for all workers grew 3.5% from a year ago, above the pre-pandemic average of 3.0%. Still, the economy is overly reliant on the health care industry, which accounted for practically all the job growth in the past year.

Productivity slowed again in 1Q26, but so did labor costs. U.S. productivity—a measure of output per hour worked—rose 0.8% at an annualized rate during the first quarter, slowing from 1.6% in the previous quarter. Much of the decline was related to hours worked, which climbed 0.7% in the quarter. That helped keep unit labor costs—the cost of labor required to produce one unit of output—in check, up 2.3%.

Consumer confidence dropped again, although inflation worries ebbed. The University of Michigan Monthly Consumer Sentiment Survey preliminary reading for May fell to 48.2, the lowest on record dating back to 1978. The spike in crude oil has quickly flowed through to gasoline and diesel prices and is likely going to add to the sour consumer vibe. It remains to be seen whether it causes consumers to step back in terms of actual spending. The good news on the consumer front is that one-year inflation expectations dipped slightly to 4.5%, while longer-term inflation expectations slipped to 3.4%.

This muddled backdrop will likely keep the Federal Reserve (Fed) sidelined in the near term, particularly amid the uncertainties of the Iran situation. Prior to the Middle East conflict, the direction of inflation had shifted and was clearly no longer grinding lower. The labor market remains soft enough to keep rate increases in check despite recent strengthening. Until there’s clearer direction on the impact of the conflict on inflation, we expect the Fed to stay on hold. That potentially delays the next Fed rate cut to the fall.

Bottom line

The U.S. economy continues to power through the uncertainty caused by the Iran War and the subsequent spike in gasoline prices. Important drivers—such as AI-led tech investment—have taken the lead as a key growth engine, while improving corporate earnings and rising guidance suggest that oil risks aren’t the dominant force shaping the U.S. economy.

With inflation no longer decelerating before the conflict and higher oil prices now pushing gasoline and diesel sharply higher, consumer spending risks are rising despite the offset from larger tax refunds. Against this muddled backdrop, we expect the Fed to stay on hold perhaps until late summer or fall.

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.1% MoM in March, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.4% for March. Rents rose 1.7% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.1% and the lowest since the COVID months.Disclosure 1

Personal Wages: Largest rise in 8 months; March was revised upward to unchanged.Disclosure 2

Services: Dipped slightly, extending expansion to 22nd straight month. The prices paid component stayed steady at 70.7, the highest level since 2022.Disclosure 3

Manufacturing: Unchanged from March, but the prices paid component jumped to its highest reading since April 2022.Disclosure 3

GDP: Business spending was the biggest contributor, surging to 6.2%. But net exports carved off 1.3 percentage points from overall GDP as imports rebounded sharply. Consumers remain solid.Disclosure 2

Business inventories: February was the first increase in three months.Disclosure 4

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability improved for the fifth straight month on strong income growth. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle dropped to 35.1 weeks in March – the lowest point in nearly four years.Disclosure 5

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 finished April with a historically strong performance rising 10.4% fueled by strong corporate earnings and easing of geopolitical tension.Disclosure 6 The 10-Year Treasury Bond yield experienced big swings. We expect rate volatility to persist.Disclosure 7

Negative

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Rose for a second week in a row and near the high for the year. Higher rates reduce affordability.Disclosure 8

Federal funds rate: 3.50 – 3.75%. The Fed held steady again at the April meeting. Markets don’t see any rate cuts in ’26; we expect a cut in the fall. New Fed Chair Warsh should be confirmed very soon.Disclosure 9

Housing: Existing home sales dropped 3.6% MoM, but prices rose 2.5% for single family homes, up 1.3% YoY. New home sales rose 7.4% MoM, but prices fell 5.3% to lowest level since July 2021. New housing starts fell 3.0% in February and then jumped 10.8% in March with weather as a factor.Disclosure 10 New building permits jumped 11.0% in February but then dropped 11.4% in March.Disclosure 4

Inflation: Consumer prices (YoY CPI) are up 3.3% YoY and Producer prices (PPI) YoY rose 4.0%, pushed by higher services, energy, and transportation prices.Disclosure 11

Consumer sentiment: Dropped to an all-time low. One-year expectations ebbed to 4.5% from 4.7%, while long-term inflation expectations slipped to 3.4%.Disclosure 12

Neutral

Jobs: Unemployment continues at 4.3%. The jobs growth trend has improved, including the first back-to-back monthly gains in a year, along with the upshifts in the six-month averages for overall job growth and private payrolls.Disclosure 11

Back to office: Fell to 54.6, down for a third straight 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

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