January 2026

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

With the government data flowing once again, most incoming data points to a resilient economy, although jobs remain a key area to watch. Between gaps in data collection during the government shutdown and delayed releases, it’s likely there won’t be a “clean” read on the economy until perhaps mid-February. For instance, consumer prices have already caught up, but wholesale prices and retail sales are through November and new home sales figures are from October.

The December jobs report was mixed. On the positive side, there was an improvement in the unemployment rate and wage growth. Yet, overall job growth was lackluster and remains concentrated in a handful of industries, while hours worked and the labor participation rate both declined.  

To sum up the labor trend during the past six months in a single word – sloppy. That’s understandable given the disruptions by tariffs and trade, the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) initiative impacting federal workers, and the government shutdown. We’ll need a few more months of data to confirm that the recent labor market weakness was related to the government shutdown and, therefore, temporary.

Aside from jobs, much of the other economic data – from retail sales and travel traffic to weekly jobless claims – reflect a steady economy, with the exceptions of housing and manufacturing. Moreover, inflation readings remain generally well behaved, due in part to lower gasoline prices. We expect an uptick in U.S. growth to 2.3% in 2026 from four primary drivers – tax incentives for consumers and businesses, marginally lower borrowing costs thanks to Federal Reserve (Fed) easing, steadier trade policy and tariffs, and continued investment in AI and technology spending.

We expect the Fed to hold steady at the January 28th meeting as policymakers await more data to confirm that recent labor softness is temporary, particularly after having cut rates at the past three meetings, including December. Looking ahead, we anticipate the Fed will continue lowering the federal funds rate to a more neutral stance near 3% over the course of 2026.

Bottom line:

The U.S. economy remains resilient, with an uptick in growth to 2.3% expected in 2026. Labor market trends over the past six months have been sloppy, disrupted by tariffs, DOGE, and data delays from the government shutdown.  Be prepared to wait until mid-February for a clean read on the economy.

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose just 0.1% MoM in November, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for November. Rents rose 2.6% 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 0.80%.Disclosure 3The 10-Year Treasury Bond Yield has ranged from 4.2% to 3.95% since Labor Day; we expect continued rate volatility.Disclosure 4

Personal Wages*: Still strong; have only declined once since January 2022.Disclosure 7

Services: Activity climbed to 14-month high, but the pace of prices paid cooled to 70.0, the coolest reading in eight months.Disclosure 10

GDP: Growth reached its fastest pace in 2 years, driven by strong consumer spending at 3.5%, well above the pre-COVID trend, and an outsized 1.59-point boost from net exports as imports stayed weak.Disclosure 7

Jobs: Unemployment fell by 0.1% to 4.4% after distortions in November. The six-month average fell to just 14,500, while the full-year 2025 sum was an equally underwhelming 584,000, or 48,700 per month.Disclosure 2

Negative

Manufacturing: Contracted for a 10th month. But the prices paid component was 64.3, almost unchanged from a year ago.Disclosure 10

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Up a tick from the prior week, still near lowest level since 2024. Higher rates reduce affordability.Disclosure 5

Federal funds rate: Fed lowered rates again in December, cutting at the third straight meeting. Markets don’t expect another rate cut until the spring.Disclosure 8

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability continued at its lowest level since December 2024. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle increased to 36.43 weeks.Disclosure 11

Housing*: New housing starts dropped 4.6% in October as multifamily plunged 25.9%, but single family starts rose 0.5%.Disclosure 13 Existing home sales rose 0.5% in December.Disclosure 12

Consumer sentiment: Back-to-back increases for the first time since the summer, but longer-term inflation expectations rose to 3.4%.Disclosure 13

Neutral

Inflation: The consumer price index (CPI) increased 2.7% YoY through December, while producer prices (PPI) rose 3.0% YoY through November.Disclosure 2

Back to office: Dropped to 48.8 during the early part of January. 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 6

Business Inventories: Up again in October. Longest stretch without a decline since 2022.Disclosure 9

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