February 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

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

Our take

Labor market strength steadies the economy despite consumer concerns about inflation from trade policies.

The U.S. economy remains solid, withstanding the repeated punches from three major hurricanes, union strikes during the autumn months, and winter storms and the wildfires more recently. U.S. payrolls rose 143,000 in January. When coupled with upward revisions from the prior two months, the six-month average is up to 177,700, mirroring the pre-COVID three-year monthly average of 177,000. A drop in unemployment rate to 4.0% combines with a bump in wages and labor participation to paint a robust labor market picture.

The Federal Reserve (Fed) is essentially in ‘wait & see’ mode in the near term. It kept the target range for the federal funds rate at 4.25% – 4.50%, still one full percentage point (1.000%) lower than September 2024.  The Fed also held its policy of quantitative tightening with balance sheet runoff at a pace of $60 billion per month along with the monthly redemption cap of $25 billion for Treasury securities and $35 billion for mortgage‑backed securities (MBS). We maintain our view that the Fed will remain on hold for the next few meetings, unlike other major central banks, such as Canada and the European Central Bank, which are continuing to cut their benchmark rates.

The evolving tariff policy adds uncertainty and clouds decision-making for policymakers and businesses alike. Sweeping tariff increases on Canada and Mexico were delayed soon after being announced, while tariffs slapping an additional 10% on Chinese imports have begun. In response, China retaliated with targeted tariffs on U.S.-made goods, announced export controls on key minerals used to make high-tech products and notified several prominent U.S. companies of possible investigations and sanctions. Within days, the U.S. announced 25% tariffs on all imported steel and aluminum beginning in mid-March, which were met with calls for retaliation by trading partners, including Canada and Europe. These moves appear to be the start of a much longer process of reconfiguring global trade alliances. Stocks and bonds have been surprisingly resilient in the face of tariffs and trade issues.

The steady U.S. economy should provide the platform for growth to continue. At this point, the Fed has paused further rate cuts to digest incoming data and reassess conditions, which we feel is warranted given the uncertainty. While consumer confidence has taken a hit from concerns and trade and its impact on inflation, a steady and positive job market continues to place a strong floor under the U.S. economy.

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

Positive

GDP: Rose 2.3% in the fourth quarter 2024. Consumer spending surged 4.2%, the fastest pace since early 2023 and well-above the pre-pandemic trend.Disclosure 1

Jobs: Rose 143,000, upward revisions helped push the 6-month average up to the pre-COVID average. The unemployment rate slipped to 4.0%. Disclosure 2

Wages: The monthly pace rose by 0.5%, matching the 2024 high and well above the pre-COVID 10-year average of 0.2%. It rose 4.1% YoY after revisions.Disclosure 3

Manufacturing: Expanded for the first time since October 2022. But the prices paid component rose to 54.9, an 8-month high.Disclosure 4

Services: The seventh straight monthly expansion, while the prices paid component cooled to 60.4 from 64.4.Disclosure 4

Apartment rental prices: Rent index rose 0.3% MoM in December, in-line with the pre-pandemic 5-year average of 0.3% for December. 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 advanced 2.7% in January.Disclosure 6 10-Year Treasury yields fell and then rose. More volatility is expected.Disclosure 7

Negative

Federal funds rate: The Fed paused rate cuts, but markets currently expect fewer than two rate cuts in 2025.Disclosure 8

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Declined for the third consecutive week.Disclosure 9

Consumer sentiment: The Index of Consumer Sentiment crashed to a 7-month low. Inflation expectations jumped to 4.3% due to tariff talk, the highest since late 2023.Disclosure 10

Neutral

Inflation: Consumer prices were higher due to energy. YoY producer prices rose to 3.3%, a 22-month high.Disclosure 2

Business inventories: Ticked upward in November, but October was revised downward to unchanged (0.0%).Disclosure 11

Back to office: Surged to 54.2, a new post-COVID high (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 12

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability declined slightly in December. Lower interest rates, higher incentives, and increased incomes could not offset the impact of higher prices. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle increased to 38.2 weeks from a downwardly revised 37.8 weeks in November.Disclosure 13

Housing: Existing home sales rose the past three months with sales up 6.1% YoY, even though 2024 sales were the lowest in 30 years.Disclosure 14 New home sales rose 3.6% MoM following two months depressed by hurricanes. New housing starts jumped 15.8%, with multi-family soaring 59% and single-family rising 3.3%. New building permits fell 0.7% in December, primarily due to a drop in multi-family with single-family homes rising at the fastest pace since February 2024.Disclosure 11

Want more insights?

Take a deeper dive into the latest market and economic conditions with detailed analysis from our economists and thought leaders.