July 2026

Truist Economic Roundup

Our monthly perspective on the latest economic data and headlines.

Our take

The Iran conflict, ongoing peace negotiations, and gyrating oil prices continue to stir the headlines. Yet, lower gasoline prices are helping moderate inflation and providing relief to consumers.

Meanwhile, there are fresh concerns on the trade front. The U.S. declined to renew the U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA). The trade pact needs updates such as digital trade, agriculture, automotive supply chain rules, and labor rights. Given the importance of cross-border trade and integrated supply chains to the growth of the North American economy, we expect the USMCA differences will get ironed out. Additionally, tariffs have returned to the spotlight with the temporary tariffs used to replace those struck down by the Supreme Court expiring in the last week of July. But tariffs won’t go away; instead, they will largely shift to other tariff statutes relating to unfair trade practices.

The service sector, which accounts for the majority of economic activity, has been treading water since March. Encouragingly, inflation pressures eased as the prices-paid component of the ISM Services survey cooled sharply, offering a positive sign that cost pressures may be moderating. Similar trends appeared in the ISM Manufacturing Index which slipped following May’s improvement. The manufacturing prices component eased as well. Manufacturing continues to struggle with challenges from uneven demand and uncertainty surrounding the economic outlook.

The labor market remains in “low hire, low fire” mode. The combination of elevated openings alongside steady hiring, layoffs, and quits suggests that labor market normalization proceeds gradually. The labor market is cooling but fundamentally stable: Employers aren’t cutting staff, and workers aren’t changing jobs.

Consumers have seen lower gasoline prices over the past weeks. That helps offset lingering inflation pressures and supports consumer spending during the second half of the year. Additionally, an increase in new vehicle sales suggests that consumers are willing to make large-ticket purchases despite elevated interest rates and economic uncertainty. The strength in auto sales points to underlying resilience in household finances and confidence.

Housing remains under pressure with existing home sales down in June. The combination of elevated prices, high financing costs, and limited inventory continues to limit transaction activity across much of the housing market.

Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Kevin Warsh will head to Capitol Hill for the semi-annual Congressional testimony. We expect that Warsh will focus his remarks on ongoing work central to how the Fed conducts monetary policy, including Fed communications and the inflation frameworks.  If inflation data continues to show cooling, we believe the threshold for a 2026 Fed rate hike remains high.

Bottom line

The U.S. economy continues to chug along despite challenges such as gasoline prices and geopolitical uncertainty. A broad range of incoming economic data suggests moderating inflation alongside steady but uneven growth, while the recent drop in energy prices is offering some near-term relief to consumers. That unevenness maintains the feeling that the economy has “one foot on the gas, one foot on the brake.” Based on current conditions, we believe the bar remains high for a 2026 Fed rate hike.

Positive

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.2% month over month (MoM) in May, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for May. Rents rose 1.9% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.3%.Disclosure 1

Personal Wages: Wages saw the largest MoM gain in 11 months.Disclosure 2

Services: Treading water since March, expanding for 24th straight month. But the prices paid component cooled sharply to 67.7.Disclosure 3

Manufacturing: Jumped to a four-year high. The prices paid component dropped to 73.0 after surging in April to 84.6, which was the highest since April 2022.Disclosure 3

GDP: Up 2.1%, revised upward from 1.6%, which was driven by net exports and business inventories, but consumer spending was revised downward.Disclosure 2

Business inventories: : Twelve months without a decline, the longest stretch since 2022.Disclosure 4

Jobs: Unemployment down to 4.3% and is now at the lowest level in 12 months. Monthly job gains at 57K missed the consensus of 113K and the 6-month average is still under the pre-COVID 3-year average of 177K/mo.Disclosure 5

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability improved in May, as lower prices, higher incentives, and strong income growth more than offset a slight increase in interest rates. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle declined to 34.9 weeks.Disclosure 12

Negative

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Up slightly on the week, continuing a see-saw pattern since early April. Higher rates challenge home buying.Disclosure 6

Federal funds rate: 3.50 – 3.75%. At Warsh’s first meeting, while the Fed held steady again, the tone was overly hawkish. Markets still see a rate hike in ‘26 but maybe not in ‘27.Disclosure 7

Housing: Existing home sales fell 2.4% with single family home sales also down 2.4%, but prices increased for a fifth straight month. New home sales dropped 7.3% month over month (MOM), but prices rose 2.0%. New housing starts dropped 15.4% in May as multi-family plunged 41.6%.Disclosure 8 New building permits fell 0.9% -- multi-family dropped 3.5% but single family rose 0.6%.Disclosure 4

Inflation: Consumer prices (CPI) are up 3.5% year-over-year (YOY) in June, but producer prices (PPI) rose 6.5% (highest since 2022), pushed by high energy prices.Disclosure 11

Consumer sentiment: Up modestly from the all-time low. One-year inflation expectations dipped to 4.6% from 4.8%, while long-term inflation expectations fell to 3.3%.Disclosure 9

Neutral

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 closed the month at a slight decline of roughly 1.3% for the month.Disclosure 10 The 10-Year Treasury Bond was up for a second straight week, although off the highs for the week. We expect rate volatility to persist.Disclosure 11

Back to office: Fell to 53.2, during the Independence Day holiday 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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