Pantheon Macroeconomics

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US Publications

Below is a list of our US Publications for the last 5 months. If you are looking for reports older than 5 months please email info@pantheonmacro.com, or contact your account rep

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Daily Monitor Weekly Monitor Samuel Tombs

1 May 2026 US Monitor Growth outside the tech sector was sluggish in Q1, before the Iran war

  • GDP grew by 2.0% in Q1, but underlying momentum was weak even before the energy shock hit in full. 
  • Consumers’ spending slowed further, while investment outside the tech sector dipped again.
  • Core PCE inflation will climb further in the near term, but we expect it to be back below 3% by year-end.

30 April 2026 US Monitor Hawkish FOMC dissents fail to erase the easing bias

  • Most Committee members stuck to language implying an easing bias, rather than placate the hawks.
  • Powell’s decision to stay on means the President must use Miran’s seat to place Warsh on the FOMC.
  • We look for Q1 GDP growth of 1.8%, with consumption mediocre and investment lifted by the AI boom.

29 April 2026 US Monitor Where is the demand destruction from higher gas prices?

  • Regular gasoline prices hit a 2026 high earlier this week, despite the modest dip in oil prices.
  • Spending on fuel and discretionary services is solid for now, but demand usually wilts after a few months.
  • The labor market components of the Conference Board survey suggest hiring remains very weak. 

28 April 2026 US Monitor FOMC to signal little urgency to shift policy, but will keep easing bias

  • The FOMC statement is unlikely to cite “two-sided” policy risk, despite better labor market data…
  • …GDP growth is slow, upside inflation risks have eased, and inflation expectations remain unalarming.
  • GDPNow’s Q1 estimate understates the rebound in federal spending, but the underlying picture is weak. 

27 April 2026 US Monitor Higher gas prices will soon hurt more, as flow of tax refunds fades

  • Tax refunds have more than offset the hit from higher gas prices, so far, but this support will fade shortly.
  • The BEA’s impartiality faces scrutiny this week when it chooses the PCE deflator input for legal services.
  • Tariff costs are down and refund applications are now going in; retailers can hold back raising prices.

24 April 2026 US Monitor Rising bank lending to businesses mostly due to private credit woes

  • Bank lending to businesses has shot up this year; often this signals faster growth in capex...
  • ...But this time the jump in lending likely reflects a tightening of access to private credit.
  • The S&P Global PMI probably is overstating the upward pressure on core inflation.

23 April 2026 US Monitor Are the green shoots of a labor market recovery emerging?

  • Weekly ADP payroll data and the ASA’s staffing index have picked up, but both have poor track records.
  • Measures of job openings have worsened, and our preferred indicators of payrolls haven’t improved.
  • The impact of AI on the economy looks too uncertain to justify rate cuts in the near term. 

22 April 2026 US Monitor Robust March retail sales mostly due to temporary supports

  • March control retail sales rose the most since August, despite the jump in gas prices...
  • ...but spending is unlikely to rise further in Q2, as support from tax refunds and the weather fades.
  • Kevin Warsh sounded less sure that AI adoption will make room for much lower rates.

20 April 2026 US Monitor Cooling rent inflation will overwhelm the energy price boost

  • Zillow’s measure of new rents increased in April by less than 0.10%, for the fourth straight month.
  • The recent further rise in the vacancy rate and pickup in multi-family starts implies the glut will continue.
  • Rent’s contribution to core CPI inflation will be 0.3pp lower by year-end, overwhelming the energy hit.

17 April 2026 US Monitor Will households borrow more to offset the gas price shock?

  • Households often borrow more when gas prices surge, and banks have become more willing to lend...
  • ...But high interest rates, elevated delinquencies and low confidence suggest people will be cautious.
  • Surveys suggest a better times ahead for manufacturers, but big headwinds remain.

15 April 2026 US Monitor Core PCE deflator likely rose 0.3% in March and April, but will cool in H2

  • The 0.1% rise in the March core PPI masked heat in components which feed into the core PCE deflator...
  • ...But inflation still look set to fall in H2 as the uplift from tariffs fades, offsetting the energy price boost.
  • The fall in the capex intentions index of the NFIB survey to a post-GFC low is most likely noise.

13 April 2026 US Monitor The fading tariff hit will overwhelm oil's impact on core inflation

  • A record jump in gas prices hugely boosted the CPI in March; expect a further 0.2pp hit in April.
  • The core CPI likely will be lifted in April by a rebound in used auto prices and a catch-up increase in rents...
  • ...But the fading tariff boost and slowing rent rises will drag down inflation in H2, despite higher oil prices.

9 April 2026 US Monitor Consumption will soon slow from Q1's modest near-2% pace

  • Real consumption likely rose 0.3% in February; unofficial data point to robust non-gas spending in March...
  • ...But the lift to incomes from tax refunds will be over soon; lower stock prices will add to the headwinds.
  • The February core PCE deflator likely rose 0.4%, due to residual seasonality and some volatile components.

8 April 2026 US Monitor The CPI likely rose 1.0% in March, driven by a record gas price surge

  • The biggest one-month jump in gas prices since at least 1957 likely boosted the headline CPI by 0.7pp.
  • Airline fares probably jumped too, while used vehicle prices are overdue a rebound…
  • …But prices for other services likely rose only modestly, justifying the FOMC’s wait-and-see stance.

6 April 2026 US Monitor The March labor market data look worse beneath the surface

  • The rebound in March payrolls was driven by the end of strikes, benign weather and residual seasonality.
  • More timely measures of job openings suggest labor demand has weakened since the Iran war began.
  • Unemployment dipped as some people looked less actively for work; history points to a swift reversal.

30 March 2026 US Monitor The labor market is too weak to embed the Iran war inflation shock

  • March payrolls will rebound after February’s drop, but a sustained strengthening is not in the cards.
  • The end of a major strike will add 32K to March jobs, but recent support from mild weather is over.
  • Claims data suggest the unemployment rate was stable in March, but the risks are to the upside.

27 March 2026 US Monitor Low initial claims provide limited comfort when hiring is so weak

  • Low claims reflect few layoffs, but hiring is still too weak to absorb fully modest growth in labor supply.
  • March business surveys point to Q1 GDP growth of about 2% in Q1...
  • ...But the jump in oil prices has triggered a surge in inventory building, supporting demand only briefly.

26 March 2026 US Monitor Oil and gas investment is unlikely to boost headline GDP growth much

  • The oil futures prices relevant for new capital investment have risen by much less than spot prices.
  • Greater capital discipline means oil investment is less responsive to jumps in prices than in the past.
  • Either way, oil and gas investment is a very small share of the overall economy.

24 March 2026 US Monitor The waning "wealth effect" will compound consumer weakness

  • The Q1 fall in households’ wealth implies a $50B hit to spending, equal to 0.2% of annual consumption. 
  • Spending on recreation services is closely correlated with changes in households’ wealth...
  • ...and near-real time data indicate that food services spending is already taking a hit.

23 March 2026 US Monitor Markets are overlooking the labor market damage of the oil shock

  • The 1990 oil shock was key to the ensuing recession; the FOMC eventually eased despite 6% inflation.
  • The economy is less oil intensive and firms’ balance sheets are more robust now; a recession is unlikely...
  • ...But this FOMC has been very responsive to labor market weakness; we still expect easing by year-end.
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