April 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

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

Our take

Trade uncertainty clouds business plans, shakes markets, and raises recession fears

Solid economic data, such as March’s strong jobs report, quickly gave way to the tariff-driven turbulence of early April. While the stock market swiftly reacted to the tariffs, it was the sharp rise in bond yields—and the corresponding impact on interest rates and exchange rates—that forced the pause on some of the highest tariffs. China was the exception as tariffs ratcheted even higher.

In the meantime, companies large and small are grappling with the uncertainty tariffs bring to their supply chains for key inputs. Within the auto industry, several companies have paused some production in all three North American countries, while others are holding imported vehicles at U.S. ports and halted rail shipments from Mexico. These actions have resulted in worker furloughs, including in the U.S. Similarly, repercussions are rippling through many other industries. Until there is more clarity around trade and tariffs, expect more stories of stalled investment decisions and delayed growth plans.

Meanwhile, there has been fallout. For instance, other countries – most notably, China – have clapped back with retaliatory measures, including increased tariffs on U.S.-made goods. Moreover, foreign consumers appear to be canceling U.S. travel plans and boycotting some U.S. goods.

Thus far, The U.S. economy has been resilient, but it’s in a holding pattern awaiting resolution on the tariffs. The longer this uncertainty lingers the more intense the headwind for the economy becomes in the near term—fueling continued volatility in financial markets, which we expect will persist in the near term.

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

Positive

GDP: 4Q24 growth was 2.4%, up 0.1 with the revisions. Consumer spending surged 4.0%, the fastest pace since 2023, staying well-above the pre-COVID trend. Conversely, the drawdown in business inventories—along with lower business spending—subtracted 1.25 percentage points from growth.Disclosure 1

Jobs: March added 228,000, double the consensus expectations of 140K. The 6-month average is slightly above the pre-COVID average. The unemployment rate rose by .1% and had been roughly flat for 11 months.Disclosure 2

Wages: Doubled expectations, it’s now up 4.6% YoY after revisions.Disclosure 3

Services: Expanded for a ninth month, albeit the lowest over that span. The prices paid component fell to 60.9.Disclosure 4

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.3% MoM in February, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.4% for February. Also, rents are up 3.5% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.1%.Disclosure 5

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability improved in February to the best level since the summer of 2021. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle decreased to 37.2 weeks, down from 37.7 weeks in January.Disclosure 

Negative

Federal funds rate: As of March, the Fed expected two rate cuts in 2025, but markets now expect three cuts by year end, though the first won’t be until June.Disclosure 7

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Flat from a week ago, despite other rates being down sharply.Disclosure 8

Consumer sentiment: Consumer confidence tumbled further on tariff worries. One-year inflation expectations spiked to 6.7%, a 44-year high.Disclosure 9

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 closed down 5.8% in March.Disclosure 10  Yields surged as bond markets gyrated as foreign buyers appeared to pause buying due to tariffs. Increased volatility will likely persist.Disclosure 11

Manufacturing: Flipped back to contraction after expanding in the past two months. The prices paid component soared to 69.4, the highest since 2022.Disclosure 4

 

Neutral

Inflation: Consumer prices steady with CPI at 6.3% YoY. YoY producer prices (PPI) rose 2.8%. Services cooled to a 9-month low.Disclosure 2

Business inventories: Matched the largest MoM increase in 8 months.Disclosure 12

Back to office: Unchanged at 53 in the latest week (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 13

Housing: Existing home sales rose although prices increased for the first time in 8 months.Disclosure 14 New home sales rose 1.8% MoM, but prices fell. New housing starts surged 11.2% as both multi- and single-family rebounded following a couple months of bad weather.Disclosure 12

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