December 2024

Truist Economic Roundup

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

Our take

Businesses are starting to get ahead of changes in trade policies with a new administration.

Businesses understand that voters asked for change and are already acting in anticipation of a new administration that looks ready to act quickly with policy changes—particularly in trade. Imports have already accelerated this year as companies rush to hedge against potential tariffs and avoid strikes at East and Gulf coast ports. The volume of shipments going through the top six U.S. ports is up 14.7% year to date.

As trade policy takes shape, all indications are that the new administration will push forward with its promises for a muscular trade policy. With tariffs of 25% having been floated, both Canadian and Mexican leaders have reached out to the new administration, while simultaneously threatening retaliatory tariffs. Expect to see multiple rounds of discussions and negotiations before policy takes shape. And the China tariff story has yet to be written. The shaping of trade policy will introduce market volatility and continue to make its way into the overall economy as businesses react.

Beyond trade, the Treasury Secretary nominee is committed to U.S. dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency, as well as reducing federal spending and the bloated federal debt load.  He’s also stated a desire to reshape tax policy. Businesses and the markets will have more to digest as details emerge.

At the consumer level, the results so far this year have been mixed. Lower gasoline prices, which are down nearly 6% from 2023, provide some relief. However, they’re offset by food prices that have jumped 27.6% from pre-pandemic levels compared to overall inflation of 22%. New home sales dropped 17.3% in October due to hurricanes, while price levels rose slightly to a median price of a new single-family home at $437,300, roughly equal to a year ago.

Overall, the economy remains resilient though volatility is expected with the changes behind government transition.

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

Positive

GDP: Held steady as upward revisions to business spending and business inventories essentially offset the downward revisions to consumer and government spending.Disclosure 1

Jobs: U.S. payrolls missed expectations by more than 100K – due to strikes and the hurricanes – but we expect sizable upward revisions for October. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.1% in October.Disclosure 2

Wages: Biggest MoM jump in 9 months. It’s now at 5.3% YoY after revisions.Disclosure 3

Services: The reading for the ISM Services index rose for the fourth month to 56.0 in October, a two-year high.Disclosure 4

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.2% MoM in October, which is below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for September. Also, rents are up 3.3% from a year ago, below the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 4.3%.Disclosure 5

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 closed at an all-time high to cap off its best month of 2024, as the US market continues a post-election rally.Disclosure 6 10-Year Treasury yields fell sharply from a week ago as investors wrestled with possible policy changes after the elections. More volatility is expected.Disclosure 7

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability improved in October as interest rates declined, incentives increased, and income gains favored the consumer. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle declined to 37.4 weeks from an upwardly revised 38.0 weeks in September.Disclosure 8

Negative

Federal funds rate: The Fed cut rates by 0.25% in November. Markets leaning towards another quarter point rate cut at the December meeting.Disclosure 9

Housing: Existing home sales rose 3.4% in October but have declined in 27 of the past 34 months.Disclosure 10 New home sales plunged 17.3% MoM due to hurricanes and higher mortgage rates. New housing starts fell 3.1% as multi-family jumped 9.8%, but single-family starts dropped 6.9%. New building permits fell 0.4% in October as multi-family permits dropped 2.7%, but single-family rose 0.8%.Disclosure 11

Manufacturing: Contracted for an eighth straight month and has only expanded once in 25 months. The prices paid component cooled to the second coolest reading in the past year.Disclosure 4

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Roughly flat from the prior week, still near the highest level since mid-July. Higher mortgage rates hurt home affordability.Disclosure 12

Neutral

Inflation: Consumer prices held at the same rate for past 3 months. Producer prices were up 0.2% in October, rising to 2.4% year-over-year.Disclosure 2

Consumer sentiment: The Index of Consumer Sentiment rose to 71.8 in November, a seven-month high. One-year inflation expectations fell to their lowest level since late 2020, and long-term rose back to 3.2%.Disclosure 13

Business inventories: Up for the 6th straight month, but at the slowest pace over that span.Disclosure 11

Back to office: Rose to 53.0 (about half of pre-pandemic levels indexed to 100). The trend has improved, a modest positive for overall growth.Disclosure 14

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