March 2026

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

The latest data releases have reinforced the choppiness that’s characterized the U.S. economy for some time. February’s labor data along with previous months’ revisions show a mixed-to-weaker labor market that certainly won’t make the Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) decisions over the coming meetings any easier. Add to that the Iran war and accompanying risks to energy prices, the global economy, and inflation, and the picture has gotten even more complex.

U.S. payrolls dropped 92,000 in February, badly missing the consensus expectation for a gain of 60,000. Downward revisions carved off another 69,000 from the January and December tallies, pulling the six-month average down to -1,000. While February’s numbers were impacted by a healthcare strike and massive winter storms, evidence of the “low hire/low fire” environment is strong. The unemployment rate rose to 4.4% leaving it above the 4.0% pre-pandemic level.  On a positive note, average hourly earnings rose 0.4% month over month and wages for rank & file workers rose 0.3% over the month.  Both are well above their respective growth rates pre-pandemic.

While we aren’t overly concerned, the direction of inflation has clearly shifted and is no longer grinding lower. Our 2026 outlook anticipated that inflation would remain stickier, and indeed inflation has risen on both the consumer and wholesale fronts in recent months. The Iranian conflict threatens to inflame inflationary pressures. Crude prices that are set on global markets jumped 40% immediately after the start of the conflict. While the U.S. is somewhat insulated from the price and supply shocks since 90% of our crude oil comes from North America, there could be more pain ahead, even if the conflict is resolved relatively quickly (our base case).

If the inflation trend persists or accelerates, it will pose a rather large hurdle for the Fed to lower interest rates later this spring. At the very least, it would push rate cuts further back in the year. In a worst-case scenario, it could avoid rate cuts altogether in 2026. However, it’s premature to make that leap based on the current trend. Given the near-term uptick in inflation (and the risk for more), even with labor market weakness, we expect the Fed to stay on hold in the near term and maintain our view for a summer rate cut.

On the positive side, personal tax refunds are running more than 10% above last year, which should help bolster consumers. That’s after just three weeks of tax returns; we anticipate refunds should at least triple in the next month—a key economic catalyst for our 2026 outlook. 

Bottom line

We’ve described the U.S. economy as feeling like it has one foot on the gas (fiscal and monetary stimulus) and one foot on the brake (trade and tariff uncertainty, underwhelming job growth), reflecting the persistent “low hire/low fire” environment. This muddled backdrop is likely to keep the Fed in a holding pattern in the near term after last year’s pre-emptive rate cuts.

 

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index was flat MoM in January, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for January. Rents rose 1.9% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.3% and the lowest since early ’21.Disclosure 1

Personal Wages: November was revised upward to 0.4% from 0.3%.Disclosure 2

Services: The 20th straight month of expansion as it jumped to the highest level since ’22. The prices paid component fell to an 11-month low.Disclosure 3

Manufacturing: Expanded in back-to-back months for the first time in a year, but the prices paid component rose to the highest reading since June 2022.Disclosure 3

GDP: Rose 1.4% on an annualized basis, missing expectations, as federal spending dropped 16.6% during the quarter. Consumer spending remains solid, up 2.4%, matching the pre-COVID trend.Disclosure 2

Negative

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Ticked upward after dropping to a four-year low a week ago. Higher rates reduce affordability.Disclosure 4

Federal funds rate: 3.50 – 3.75%. Following the Iran conflict, markets pushed back rate cut expectations until the July or September meeting. Warsh is new Fed pick.Disclosure 5

Housing: Existing home sales dropped 8.4% as single-family prices fell for the sixth time in seven months. New housing sales fell 1.7% MoM as prices jumped 4.2%.Disclosure 6 New housing starts jumped 6.2% in December. New building permits also rose 4.8%, but single-family dropped 1.7%.Disclosure 7

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 was down 0.9%.Disclosure 8 The 10-Year Treasury Bond Yield surged back above 4%. We expect rate volatility to persist.Disclosure 9

Jobs: Monthly jobs dropped 92,000 in February, along with revisions, pulling the six-month average down to a weak -1,000. Unemployment rose to 4.4%.Disclosure 10

Inflation: Consumer prices (YoY CPI) were up 2.4%, matching a 9-month low. Producer prices (PPI) YoY rose 2.9%, despite a large decline in energy and food prices.Disclosure 10

Neutral

Consumer sentiment: Remained just under 6-month high as near-term inflation expectations fell sharply, down to 3.4% – a 14-month low.Disclosure 11

Back to office: Rebounded to 56.9, which is a 12-week high. 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 in December after being flat in November.Disclosure 7

New vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability improved in January and reached the best level since tariffs were first announced in March 2025. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle is 35.6 weeks.Disclosure 13

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