Recent financial market gains have been underpinned by resilient global data, AI-fuelled optimism, and hopes that most central banks will continue to loosen monetary policy. Yet beneath the surface, a more complicated picture may be emerging. In the US, housing indicators are flashing warnings about household balance sheets and credit channels (chart 1), while China’s latest data—covering retail sales, industrial output, and property—underscore persistent weakness (chart 2). In the UK, this week’s data showing sticky services inflation is complicating the Bank of England’s easing path (chat 3), while back in the US, medium-term inflation expectations have been rising despite softer oil prices (chart 4), hinting at a more disruptive role for trade policy. Against this cyclical backdrop sit deeper structural challenges: global energy consumption remains overwhelmingly dependent on fossil fuels, the clean energy sector has lost momentum amid high costs and policy uncertainty, and equity markets have punished renewables even as climate imperatives intensify (charts 5 and 6). Together, these dynamics suggest that while markets continue to trade on optimism, the mix of weak housing signals, patchy Chinese demand, sticky inflation, and an uneven energy transition potentially leaves the global outlook more fragile than headline performance implies.
- Home sales remain below recent high in December.
- Sales are slightly higher m/m in most of country.
- Median sales price slips from record high.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Aug 21 2025
U.S. Philly Fed Manufacturing Index Dipped Below Zero in August
- The headline index fell more than 16 points to -0.3, led by outsized declines in both new orders and shipments.
- The ISM-adjusted composite fell below the critical 50 level for the first time in four months, also pointing to a decline in activity.
- Delivery times shortened further while both prices paid and prices received indexes posted gains.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- Initial claims surge to highest level in eight weeks.
- Continuing claims extend upward trend.
- Insured unemployment rate holds steady.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- Purchase applications edge higher while loan refinancing declines.
- Effective fixed-interest rate on 30-year loans remains at four-month low.
- Average loan size declines.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Aug 19 2025
U.S. Housing Starts Strengthen Unexpectedly in July
- Increase brings starts to five-month high.
- Multi-family starts surge while single-family starts rise moderately.
- Building permits decline is led by multi-family.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Aug 19 2025
U.S. Retail E-Commerce Sales Rise in Q2'25
- Sales +1.4%, the 14th q/q rise in 15 qtrs.; +5.3% y/y, the lowest since Q2'22.
- Online share of total retail sales up to 16.3%, the highest since Q2'20.
- Nonstore sales rebound, up for the fourth quarter in five.
- Widespread gain in online sales led by bldg. materials & garden equipt. (+34.7% q/q).
- USA| Aug 19 2025
U.S. Energy Prices Are Mixed in Latest Week
Retail gasoline prices for all grades, on average, inched up to $3.25 per gallon (-7.1% y/y) last week after falling to $3.24 one week earlier. Prices remained above their low of $3.13 in the week of December 9. The recent high was $3.79 in the week ending April 22, 2024. Their all-time high of $5.11 occurred in the week ending June 13, 2022. The retail price for on-highway diesel fuel fell to $3.71 per gallon (+0.7% y/y) in the week of August 18 after easing to $3.75 in the prior week. The latest diesel price stood well below a high of $4.63 in the week ending September 18, 2023 and a peak of $5.81 in the week ending June 20, 2022.
The price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil declined to $63.31 per barrel (-19.7% y/y) in the week ended August 15 from $64.71 in the prior week. The drop left prices at the lowest level since the first week of June. Prices remained above a $59.04 low in the second week of May. The cost of crude oil peaked at $120.46 in the week of June 10, 2022. Yesterday, the price was $63.96 per barrel. The price of European Brent crude fell to $67.17 per barrel (-18.6% y/y) in the week of August 15, after falling to $68.17 in the prior week. Prices remained below a recent high of $95.61 in the week of September 29, 2023 and below a peak of $127.40 in June 2022. The price was $68.18 per gallon yesterday.
Natural gas prices slipped to an average $2.94/mmbtu (+38.0% y/y) in the week ended August 15, after falling to an average $2.99/mmbtu in the prior week. Prices remained well above a low of $1.40/mmbtu in the week of March 15, 2024 but below their peak of $9.56 in the week of August 26, 2022. Yesterday, the price was $2.96 per mmbtu.
Gasoline demand declined 1.5% y/y in the four weeks ending August 8, following a 2.2% y/y decline in the prior four weeks. Demand for all petroleum products rose 2.9% y/y in the four weeks ending August 8, after a 1.6% y/y increase in the previous four-week period. Crude oil input to refineries rose 4.2% y/y in the four weeks ending August 8, after a 2.9% y/y gain in the prior four weeks.
Gasoline inventories rose 1.8% y/y in the week ending August 8 after a 0.9% y/y in the prior week. Residual fuel oil inventories fell 25.7% y/y in the week of August 8, after a 25.8% y/y fall in the prior week. Crude oil inventories rose 2.8% y/y in the week of August 8 after a 2.7% y/y rise in the previous week.
Measured in days’ supply, gasoline inventories stood at 25.0 days in the week of August 8, unchnged from the prior week. The recent low was 22.9 days in the week of November 8, 2024. The supply of crude oil held at 25.0 days in the week of August 8, and remained below a high of 31.9 days in the week of March 3, 2023.
These data are reported by the Energy Information Administration of the U.S. Department of Energy. The price and supply/demand data can be found in Haver’s WEEKLY & USENERGY database.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
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