July 2025

Truist Economic Roundup

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

Our take

Passage of tax and debt ceiling bill provides much-needed clarity, but tariff uncertainties continue to cloud the view

Last week brought more clarity on government policy with the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA), which also raised the debt ceiling, removing two major sources of policy uncertainty that have plagued sentiment this year.  Although the near-term economic lift from the OBBBA is modest, the bill provides long-term clarity on tax policy, particularly for small businesses, farms, and high-income individuals in high-tax states. Resolving the debt ceiling lowers fiscal disruption risks and helps stabilize markets and business confidence for the second half of the year.

Still, uncertainty increased in recent weeks as the White House ratcheted up pressure on trading partners from Japan to Canada to get trade deals by announcing higher tariffs. That’s on top of the sector tariff policy swings already affecting key industries, such as automobiles, steel, and aluminum. June auto sales declined for the third month in a row, following a March spike as buyers rushed purchases to avoid new tariffs. Ultimately, the on-again/off-again nature of tariff policy continues to distort economic data and decision-making, with many businesses remaining in “wait and see” mode. Until there is greater clarity on trade policy, tariffs will cloud the economic picture.

Uncertainty has been heightened by expectations regarding Federal Reserve (Fed) actions for the rest of 2025. The notion of replacing the Fed Chair prior to the end of Chair Jay Powell’s term in May 2026 has gotten new life in the past few weeks as headlines swirled about the Fed’s management of refurbishing its two Washington headquarters buildings, which had massive cost overruns. Yet, the Fed Chair—while influential—holds just one of 12 votes when setting interest rate policy. Even if a new Chair were inclined to cut rates immediately, they cannot act unilaterally. The Fed’s decision-making process is deliberate, data-dependent, and designed to resist abrupt shifts in policy.

The U.S. economy remains in a “muddle-through” mode—where activity is uneven, but the underlying economic foundation remains intact. While the passage of the tax and debt ceiling deal removes elements of uncertainty, lingering tariff and trade policy uncertainty continues to weigh on growth. Until trade policy normalizes, the on-again/off-again tariffs will continue to create air pockets of demand that will jostle economic data.

Positive

Jobs: Hiring remains resilient, adding 147K jobs in June, well above the consensus expectations of 106K. The three-month average is now 150K, up from 111K in the first quarter. The unemployment rate slipped to 4.1% after three months at 4.2%.Disclosure 1

Wages: Fell for the first time since 2021 but rose 4.5% year over year.Disclosure 2

Apartment rental prices: Rose to 85.0, the highest level of 2025. It remains under the 2024 average (88.5) and well below the 2019 average (94.2).Disclosure 3

Stock and bond markets: The S&P 500 reached record highs in July, gaining almost 11% during the second quarter.Disclosure 4 Yields have jumped 0.19% since the end of June as bond investors fret about the timing of Fed rate cuts. Rate volatility will likely persist.Disclosure 5

Negative

GDP: Revised downward from -0.2%. A spike in imports due to tariff front running wiped out growth in 1Q25, while the pace of consumer spending slowed considerably from 4.0% in 4Q24 to 0.5%.Disclosure 2

Federal funds rate: The Fed held rates at the June meeting and projects two cuts in 2025. Markets also see two cuts this year starting in September or October.Disclosure 6

30-year fixed mortgage rate: Rose slightly, ending a five-week slide. Higher rates hurt home affordability.Disclosure 7

Consumer sentiment: Recovered from recent lows, but inflation concerns lingering due to tariff worries. One-year inflation expectations remain elevated at 5.0%.Disclosure 8

Manufacturing: Contracted for a fourth-straight month. The prices paid component rose to 69.7, which is the highest level since June 2022.Disclosure 9

Services: Recovered after contracting in May. The prices paid component ebbed to 67.5 from 68.7 in May.Disclosure 9

Housing: Existing home sales rose 0.8% while prices rose 2.1% in May.Disclosure 8 New home sales fell 13.7% MoM with weakness in the South. New housing starts fell 2.0%. Single-family fell 2.7%, but multi-family rose 1.4%.Disclosure 10

New-vehicle affordability: New-vehicle affordability remained steady in May at the worst level this year. The number of median weeks of income needed to purchase the average new vehicle remained steady at 37.4 weeks.Disclosure 11

Neutral

Inflation: Consumer price reaccelerated in June as evidence of tariffs began creeping into import-dominated product categories such as appliances, auto parts, and tires.Disclosure 1

Business inventories: Flat in April after climbing for three straight months.Disclosure 12

Back to office: Rose to 52.3, down for a third 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

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