07/25/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 07/25/2025 10:13
The Conference Board's Leading Economic Index® fell 0.3% in June, following upwardly revised flat growth in May. The index (now at 98.8) was down 2.8% over the first half of the year, a substantially faster rate of decline compared to the 1.3% contraction over the second half of 2024. Lower consumer expectations and new orders were the largest contributors to the decline.
Existing home sales fell 2.7% in June to a 3.93 million seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR). Inventories declined 0.6% on the month but were up nearly 16% Y/Y, while sales were flat from a year ago. At the current sales pace, inventories represented a 4.7-month supply (the highest since 2016 excluding May 2020). The median sales price rose 2.0% Y/Y to $435,300.
Following a decline in May, new home sales rose in June, up 0.6%. May was the lowest rate since November 2024. With 33,000 pounds of chemistry in a typical single-family home, new residential construction is an important end-use market for chemicals. The inventory of unsold homes rose and represented a 9.8-month supply at the current sales pace. Compared to a year ago, inventories were up 8.5% Y/Y while sales were down 6.6% Y/Y. The median sales price was down 2.9% Y/Y.
The AIA/Deltek Architecture Billings Index (ABI) pointed to a continued contraction in June with a score of 46.8, down from 47.2 in May. A score below 50 represents a contraction in billings as more firms report a decrease (rather than an increase) in activity. Excluding October 2024, the ABI has been in negative territory since August 2023. Despite the decline in billings, the index measuring inquiries into new projects increased for the second straight month.
Headline durable goods orders tumbled 9.3% in June, following a 16.5% rebound in May. The decline was led (as is often the case) by a sharp pullback in civilian aircraft, a notoriously choppy segment. There were also declines in orders for computers and communications equipment. Those declines were partially offset by broad gains across several major categories, including defense aircraft, metals, machinery, other electronic products (i.e., semiconductors), motor vehicles, and electrical equipment. Core business orders (nondefense capital goods, excluding aircraft) eased by 0.7%, following a 2.0% gain in May. Compared to a year ago, core orders were up 5.0% Y/Y while headline orders were up 12.6% Y/Y.
The U.S. economy continues to struggle with high levels of uncertainty. Recession odds remain higher than they were at the beginning of the year, but growth in the U.S. economy, while slowing, remains positive. Many of our forecast indicators improved in July.
According to data released by the Association of American Railroads, chemical railcar loadings were up to 33,460 for the week ending July 19th. Loadings were up 1.1% Y/Y (13-week MA), up 1.9% YTD/YTD and have been on the rise for 7 of the last 13 weeks.
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