Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics

Economy in Brief

  • Federal receipts strengthen while outlays decline.
  • Customs duties increase but interest payments slow.
  • Year-to-date deficit increases.

More Commentaries

    • Inventory decline reverses two months of increase.
    • Sales decline is first in four months.
    • I/S ratio steadies at three-year low.
    • Purchase applications +9.4% w/w; refinancing loan applications +9.2% w/w.
    • Effective interest rate on 30-year fixed-rate loans falls to 6.95%, the lowest since the Apr. 4 week.
    • Average loan size declines for the third time in four weeks.
  • There will be no Charts of the Week publication for the next couple of weeks. The next edition will be released on Thursday, July 30th.

    Recent buoyancy in global equity markets reflects a welcome mix of encouraging signals: growth is holding up better than many feared, inflation surprises have turned more benign, and most major central banks are poised to continue lowering interest rates in the period immediately ahead (charts 1, 2 and 3). There are, however, pockets of strain beneath the surface. Trade growth in Asia has slowed, most visibly in exports to the US, as tariffs and lingering tensions weigh on key sectors (chart 4). At the same time, China’s rising capital outflows point to firms and investors hedging their bets by shifting more assets abroad (chart 5). These undercurrents hint at an uneven global picture where trade frictions and capital shifts could test the durability of the recent calm. On a more positive note, the strong, steady climb in renewable energy production is a bright spot, underscoring the scale of investment pouring into the clean energy transition—even as real energy costs remain firm (chart 6). Altogether, while the broader backdrop remains supportive, new trade barriers, shifting capital flows, and the hidden costs of the green transition are watchpoints that could unsettle markets if growth momentum stalls or policy missteps occur.

    • Consumer credit weakens more than expected.
    • Nonrevolving credit usage eases as revolving credit declines.
    • Economic & sales expectations slip.
    • Employment plans & job openings improve.
    • Percent lifting prices and price expectations rise.
  • The current and future economy watchers indexes advanced in June. In the current index, only services, housing, and employment readings weakened. In the future index, the reading for corporations weakened based on weakness for nonmanufacturing corporations. However, the improvement signaled is still quite downbeat since it only indicates that the ongoing deterioration is slower. The diffusion readings continue to be below 50, indicating pullbacks across all categories are still in train and are only letting up slightly.

    While the improvements in the month-to-month readings were widespread, they were mostly small and no reading in either the current or the future survey has a diffusion value above 50%. That means that all these economy watcher readings are actually showing deterioration although on the month the rate of deterioration slowed across most category readings. In fact, there are no month-to-month readings at or above 50 in either the current or future survey in the last three months. To get a category reading of 50 or higher, we must go back to February when the reading for future employment was 50. We go back to August 2024 to find a majority of future sector reading at 50 or higher and to March 2024 to get a majority of current readings above 50.

    The far-right hand column assesses the level of the June diffusion readings vs. past readings back to 2002. On that 23-year timeline, all the current and future readings have percentile standings below the 50% mark leaving all of them below their respective median readings for the period.

    In the current survey, retailing and nonmanufacturers with diffusion percentile standings in their respective 41st percentiles have the strongest queue readings. The weakest reading in the current survey are the 21st percentile standings for housing and for employment.

    For the future survey percentile readings, the strongest is a 45.5 percentile standing for eating and drinking places. The weakest future reading is the 24.5 percentile reading for employment.

    Seeing such weakness in the current and future indexes in employment a reading that is a lynchpin for all sectors is clearly not reassuring.

    At the bottom of the table, there are collected results for monthly data on month-to-month changes on the breadth of improvement. We see monthly that after a poor performance in April with most reporting categories worsening, May and June show most of them improving month-to-month on the order of 70% to 100%. Similar metrics for three-month and six-month changes perform much worse. These calculations are executed on changes in averages the twelve-month and average six-month and average 3-month data. On those comparisons, we see average diffusion is up broadly over 12 months compared to 12-months earlier. But the averages over six months and over three months are showing declines across all categories.

    While the monthly data are showing some month-to-month improvement, the broader data show that the pace of improvement linked to broad averages is still not in place. And it is still a nefarious since of ‘improvement’ for the overall readings in which the diffusion data are only signaling that the categories are getting worse at a slower pace. Japan continues to struggle with weakness as the Bank of Japan wrestles with inflation and the United States and Japan spar over tariffs.

  • This week, we look at the latest US trade developments and their implications for Asia, as President Trump unveiled new tariff rates on 14 countries (chart 1). Though some rates were lower and implementation delayed to August 1, the move signals the US tariff pause is ending and deepens investor uncertainty in Asia. Market sentiment has weakened, reflecting both renewed policy risks and stalled trade negotiations in the region (chart 2).

    Vietnam stands out as a rare exception, having secured a deal with the US that reduced its tariff rate from 46% to 20%. However, the agreement includes a 40% tariff on “transshipments,” aimed at curbing indirect exports from third countries, such as China. In return, the US has gained tariff-free access to Vietnamese markets—an offsetting benefit for American firms. Nonetheless, the 20% rate remains high and could raise costs for US consumers if passed through supply chains (chart 3). Japan, by contrast, faces a more delicate balancing act. A 25% tariff was confirmed, while pressure persists over access for US agricultural exports—particularly rice (chart 4). Domestic sensitivities remain elevated amid a rice shortage and looming upper house elections, limiting Tokyo’s room to manoeuvre.

    Regional central banks are responding cautiously. The Reserve Bank of Australia held rates steady, defying expectations of a cut and citing a need for more information (chart 5). Rate decisions from South Korea, New Zealand, and Malaysia are due this week, with South Korea’s central bank seen likely to hold, amid rising home prices and mortgage growth (chart 6).

    Latest US tariff developments As previously signalled, US President Trump on Monday unveiled a new round of tariff rates targeting 14 countries, confirming initial fears that the US would move forward with reciprocal tariffs following its 90-day pause. While investor concerns—renewed late last week—have begun to materialize, there are two modest sources of relief. First, as shown in chart 1, many of the newly announced US tariff rates are actually lower than those initially unveiled on “Liberation Day,” April 2. Second, President Trump has delayed the effective date of the tariffs to August 1, offering a temporary window for countries that have not yet done so to negotiate trade deals with the US. However, while the extension allows more time for dialogue, it does not constitute a formal delay in implementation—at least for now. That said, progress in trade negotiations with the US remains limited across most Asian economies. In some cases, such as Japan, talks may have even come to an impasse—this will be explored further in subsequent sections. Vietnam, however, stands out as an exception, having secured a trade agreement with the US late last week; this development will also be discussed in more detail later on.

    • Prices increase broadly after earlier declines.
    • Metals prices lead upturn.
    • Textile price rise but rubber prices are little changed.