- June sales -2.4% m/m to 4.09 mil., first drop in three mths.; +2.8% y/y, third straight y/y rise.
- Sales m/m down in the South (-3.6%), Midwest (-3.0%), and West (-1.3%); up in the Northeast (+2.1%).
- Sales y/y up in all regions except the Northeast w/ a flat reading.
- Median sales price +2.2% (+1.8% y/y) to $440,600, a record high.
- Unsold inventory -0.6% (+1.3% y/y) to 1.56 mil. units, first m/m decline since Dec.; 4.6 months' supply, highest since Aug. ’25.
- USA| Jul 09 2026
U.S. Initial Unemployment Claims Declined in the Week of July 4
- New claims declined by 2,000 to 215,000 in the week ending July 4.
- Continuing claims rose by 8,000 to 1.814 million in the week ending June 27.
- The insured unemployment rate was unchanged at 1.2% in the week of June 27.
- Germany| Jul 09 2026
German Trades Surplus Balloons
The German trade surplus surged in May to €19.1 billion from €14.7 billion in April. Exports rose by 0.9% in May while imports fell by 2.5%, creating a jump in the surplus month-to-month. In April, exports increased by 0.8% while imports rose by 1.1%.
Details on exports and imports lag by one month. In April, exports for motor vehicles and consumer goods declined, while exports of capital goods and other exports rose. On the import side, there were increases in imports ranging from 2.8% to 4.3% month-to-month across capital goods, motor vehicles, and consumer goods, but for the catch-all category ‘other’ imports fell by 2.7% month-to-month.
Flows adjusted for inflation showed an increase in exports of 0.4% in May while real imports fell by 3.3%. In April, real exports were flat while real imports fell by 0.2%.
The sequential behavior of real exports and real imports show independent activity. Imports log a clear weakening, rising 0.1% over 12 months, falling at a 5% annual rate over six months, and then falling at a 10.3% annual rate over three months. On the export side, real exports rose by 2.6% over 12 months, accelerated to a 7.2% annual rate over six months, but over three months have pulled back and fallen at a 1.6% annual rate. However, export growth still exceeds import growth over each of these horizons: 12 months, six months, and three months.
Trade trends paint a darkening picture of the German economy, with imports weak in real terms and trending even weaker, while activity on the export side of the equation pops over 12 months and six months but takes a hit over three months.
- USA| Jul 08 2026
U.S. Mortgage Applications Retrenched in the July 3 Week
- Both applications for loans to purchase and applications for loan refinancing declined in the latest week.
- Interest rate on 30-year fixed-rate loans rose 1bp to 6.77%.
- Average loan size edged down.
The Clash! The U.S.-Iranian clash in the Middle East resulted in a closure of the Strait of Hormuz that collapsed the economy watchers index in Japan earlier this year. However, as the war-like conditions settled down and the two sides have moved toward some kind of cease fire or a more permanent arrangement, in the wake of that comparative tranquility, the economy watchers index improved, and its future index improved more sharply. These comments applied to the data in the table and conditions up to the end of June.
New day dawning... However, the data in the table are unrelated to what has happened in the past two days, when Iran took potshots at a couple of ships in the Strait, causing the U.S. to retaliate and President Trump to declare that the ceasefire has now ended. The door remains open for some kind of talks; however, the president’s recent remarks carried in the newspapers has clearly stated that the ceasefire has ended, and the U.S. intends to hit Iran and has suggested that it intends to hit it ‘hard.’ At the same time, Mr. Trump has said the door remains open to continuing talk and negotiations if both sides still want to get together; however, he admits he is not optimistic.
Precarious times and conditions So, these are precarious conditions. Oil prices have already responded and moved higher. We have Japan’s economic data for June showing some revival in the current index and some sharply higher revivals over the last few months in the future index. However, when the dust clears the queue standings of the current and future indexes are revealed, they are pretty similar, with the current index at a standing of 29.6% and the future index of 31.6%. Both the current and future readings coalesce around a 30-percentile standing, marking the two segments of the survey as usually stronger about 70% of the time which marks the latest readings as relatively weak. And that is before we take the new realities of July into account.
The current IS the future... There isn't too much point in talking about the two parts of the survey separately. The current and future surveys are simply not that different. This month, the lowest percentile standing in the current subindexes is housing, at an 11.5 percentile standing, followed by employment at a 17.8 percentile standing. In the future index, housing has an 11.1 percentile standing and employment has an 18.6 percentile standing; these readings are also the two lowest rankings in the future survey.
Sequential improvement is only point-to-point Over three months, we can see the point-to-point changes in the current index and some improvements in all of the components except housing. In the future index, the three-month changes show point-to-point improvements in all of the components. However, both surveys show point-to-point declines over six months and broad point-to-point declines over 12 months as well. Looking at the changes based on smooth data (shown at the bottom of the table), for the three-month averages compared to six-month averages and six-month averages compared to 12-month averages, conditions show no improvement. We see no improvements in the current or future indexes over three months or six months, and no improvement in the future index in the 12-month average compared to 12-month average of 12 months ago—although 40% of the components in the current index are improved over 12 months compared to 12 months ago.
- USA| Jul 07 2026
U.S. Trade Deficit Widened Markedly in May
- The deficit in goods and services widened to $77.6 billion in May from $54.6 billion in April.
- Exports slumped 3.2% m/m, led by an outsized fall in exports of nonmonetary gold and other precious metals.
- Imports increased by 3.3% m/m with increases in each major end-use category.
- The goods deficit widened to $106.5 billion, while the services surplus widened to $28.9 billion.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- Germany| Jul 07 2026
German IP Marks Large Gain
German industrial production in May rose by 0.9% after rising by 0.2% in April. Top-line growth for industrial production shows an increase of 0.1% over 12 months, a decline of 0.2% over six months, but a revival with growth at a 4% annual rate over three months. The revival was led by consumer goods output, which gained 1.2% in May after rising 2.2% in April. Consumer goods output is lower by 0.1% over 12 months, rises at a 2.6% annual rate over six months, and again at an 8.6% annual rate over three months, marking an acceleration over this three-period sequence. Capital goods, however, an important sector in the German economy, continued to be erratic in May. Capital goods output rose by 1.3% in May after falling by more than 1% in each of the two previous months. Capital goods output is lower by 2.8% over 12 months, falling at an 8.6% annual rate over six months, and that drop is trimmed to a 4.4% contraction over three months.
The output of consumer goods is pushing industry production higher, but the output of capital goods is pulling industrial production back lower. Intermediate goods, however, are showing growth and acceleration, despite falling by 0.4% in May after increases in each of the two previous months. Nevertheless, intermediate goods output is up by 1.1% over 12 months; it accelerates from a 1.9% annual rate over six months to a 6.4% annual rate over three months.
Focusing on manufacturing output alone, there was a gain in output of 0.8% in May and a gain of 0.3% in April. However, manufacturing output is still lower by 0.6% over 12 months and falls at a 2.3% annual rate over six months before recovering a 2.2% annual rate gain over three months; nothing in this sequence is an impressive performance.
Real manufacturing orders have been oscillating back and forth, rising by 1.9% in May after falling 3.2% in April. However, over 12 months, real orders for manufactured goods are up 6.3%; yet that same series falls at a 4% annual rate over six months and then rebounds to surge ahead at a 12.8% annual rate over three months. That's an erratic performance, but with a good ending trend. Real sales in manufacturing show gains in each of the last three months, including a 1.8% month-over-month increase in May. Real sales in manufacturing rise to a 4.2% annual rate over six months and 12 months and then accelerate to a 12.4% annual rate over three months. The performance of sales is encouraging and fits well at least with the three-month spurt in real manufacturing orders.
Indicators for the German economy show that the ZEW current index weakened to -77.8 in May from -73.7 in April. The IFO manufacturing index moved higher, with the May reading of 86.7 compared to 86.3 in April. Manufacturing expectations in the IFO framework, however, weakened to 87.7 in May from 88.2 in April. The EU Commission industrial index registered -15.6 in May after -14.5 in April, another sign of weakening. Two of these four indexes weakened sequentially, looking at the values from 12 months to six months to three months; improvements were seen in the ZEW current index and the EU Commission index on this timeline.
Looking at manufacturing IP output data from select other European countries, France and Spain showed slippage in May compared to April, while Portugal posted a gain in May after a decline in April. Over 12 months, six months, and three months, France shows period-to-period positive growth, but growth is not gaining momentum. Spain shows an increase of 0.4% in output over 12 months, with slippage over six months and a solid gain over three months. In Portugal, output acceleration is in gear, with a 2.2% decline over 12 months shifting to a 6.7% annual rate gain over six months and a 10.6% annual rate gain over three months.
On a quarter-to-date (QTD) basis, German industrial production is rising for all the major sectors except for capital goods. Manufacturing output is rising QTD, along with real manufacturing orders and real sales in manufacturing. The industrial surveys for Germany all weaken QTD. Industrial production shows QTD declines for France and Spain, while Portugal posts a gain.
The ranking of year-over-year growth rates, or, for indicators, the ranking of the level compared to the past back to 2006, shows mostly weak performance for German output. There is a stronger assessment for the intermediate goods with a year-over-year growth rate ranking above the 50% rank, putting it above its historic median. Demand indicators, however, as reflected in real manufacturing orders and real sales for manufactured goods, have rankings in the 70th percentile, showing some better life for demand—that could bode well for output in the future. The industrial indicators, however, are all weak and substantially weak compared to their historic levels back to 2006.
On balance, the manufacturing and industrial data as well as surveys as of May for Germany and Europe show mixed results. There are a few pockets of strength; one of the bright spots is demand, but supply has not consistently responded to it yet. The industrial surveys are uniformly weak and definitely not a bright spot. Overall, the results are not reassuring.
- USA| Jul 06 2026
U.S. ISM Services PMI Eases in June, Still Indicating Expansion for the 24th Straight Month
- ISM Services PMI down to 54.0 in June, remaining above the 12-month avg. of 53.1.
- Business Activity (55.4) expands for the 24th consecutive mth.; New Orders (55.1) for the 13th straight mth.; Employment (51.2, first expansion since Feb.); Supplier Deliveries (54.4 vs. 55.2).
- Prices Index (67.7) at a four-month low, still indicating prices rising since June ’17.
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