January 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

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

Our take

Job growth keeps Fed rate cuts at bay while powering a resilient economy

Labor market conditions have remained steady. U.S. payrolls were up 256,000 in December after a six-month average of 164,700 per month, and the unemployment rate dropped to 4.1%. Wages have held firm, while hours worked have been steady for the past five months. The job market has shaken off the softness experienced last summer and fall after multiple hurricanes and brief strikes (aircraft machinists and dock workers).

Robust job growth bolsters the case for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to take a ‘wait & see’ approach to additional rate cuts in the near term. Fewer rate cuts will most likely disappoint markets. While the overall rate environment is complicated given the sharp rise in interest rates during the past month, a stronger economy is always a winner—even if that translates into fewer rate cuts.

Sadly, Mother Nature doesn’t follow economic trends, and the devastating fires in California are a heartbreaking reminder of this fact. Along with the awful impact on individuals and families in Los Angeles, the effects of fires and their destruction in the second largest metropolitan area in the U.S. are likely to ripple through the economy for months and years to come. Combined with the anticipation of policy changes with the incoming administration, we can expect the recent bouts of volatility in financial markets to continue for the foreseeable future.

The economy is proving to be resilient, even after some noisy months. Headline jobs growth, major industry and subindustry trends, the unemployment rate, hours worked, and wage indications all point to solid labor market conditions—cooler than 2022 and 2023 but still strong. The favorable jobs market remains the backbone of today’s economy and the power behind consumer strength and a U.S. economy that’s doing just fine.

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

Positive

GDP: 3Q2024 forecast adjusted up to 3.1% after upward revisions to consumer spending and modest downward revisions elsewhere.Disclosure 1

Jobs: Solid job growth with increases above 200,000 in 3 of the past 4 months. The unemployment rate held steady for the past 7 months.Disclosure 2

Wages: The MoM pace dipped to 0.3% but with a strong 5.3% YoY rise after revisions.Disclosure 3

Services: The 6th straight monthly expansion with the prices paid component jumping to 64.4, the highest level since February 2023.Disclosure 4

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.3% MoM in November, just below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.4% for November. Also, rents are up 3.4% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.1%.Disclosure 5

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 had a weak close in December after a post-election rally. Overall, 2024 was a good year for stock market returns.Disclosure 6

10-Year Treasury yields jumped to the highest level since October 2023 on investor worries about tariffs, inflation, and Fed rate cuts. More volatility is expected.Disclosure 7

 

Negative

Federal funds rate: The Fed cut rates by 0.25% again in December, and projected two rate cuts in 2025, fewer than previously expected.Disclosure 8

Manufacturing: Contracted for a 9th straight month and has expanded only once in 25 months. The prices paid component rose for a 5th time in 6 months.Disclosure 4

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Climbed to its highest level since June despite recent rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. Higher mortgage rates hurt home affordability.Disclosure 9

Neutral

Inflation: Consumer prices higher due to food and energy. Producer prices were up 0.4% in November due to jump in egg prices.Disclosure 2

Consumer sentiment: The Index of Consumer Sentiment had its first dip in 5 months to 73.2 in December. One-year and long-term inflation both jumped to 3.3% due to talk of tariffs.Disclosure 10

Business inventories: October up, but September revised downward to unchanged (0.0%).Disclosure 11

Back to office: Plunged to 19.1 during the week of New Year (pre-pandemic levels indexed to 100). The trend has improved, a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 12

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability declined in November due to rising prices but is still more affordable than a year ago. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle increased slightly to 37.9 weeks from an upwardly revised 37.6 weeks in October.Disclosure 13

Housing: Existing home sales rose in October and November with sales up 6.1% YoY.Disclosure 14 New home sales rose 5.9% MoM following two months depressed by hurricanes. New housing starts fell 1.8% as multi-family plunged 24.1%, while single-family starts rose 6.4%. New building permits jumped 6.1% in November as multi-family permits soared 22.1%, but single-family rose 0.1%.Disclosure 11

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