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

Please use the filters on the right to search for a specific date or topic.

Datanotes Daily Monitor Chartbook

3 June 2026 US Monitor The jump in April job openings will be erased by revisions

  • The jump in April job openings was driven by a sector where the first estimate usually is revised significantly.
  • Other measures of openings have continued to trend down; low quits imply a real wage squeeze is ahead.
  • We doubt that the recent acceleration in corporate profits signals a sharp cyclical upswing.

2 June 2026 US Monitor Weak headline manufacturing output obscures a high-tech boom

  • Weak growth in headline manufacturing output in recent years is hiding a boom in advanced industriess.
  • That’s a plus for productivity and US economic leadership, less so for manufacturing employment. 
  • The construction sector remains mired in recession; data center surge is offsetting little of wider malaise.

PM Datanote: US ISM Manufacturing Survey, May 2026

Supply chain disruptions providing a temporary boost to activity.

PM Datanote: US New Home Sales, April 2026

Weak sales likely to prompt a further drop in starts.

PM Datanote: US Q1 GDP, April DGO & PCE

Recent increases in consumption look unsustainable.

29 May 2026 US Monitor Consumption to lose more momentum over the summer

  • Q1 growth in personal consumption was revised down to 1.4%, from 1.6%; April saw a marginal rise. 
  • Real after-tax income has dropped by 1.1% since April; the saving rate is now effectively at its floor.
  • Rising asset prices will help, but sluggish growth in real wages and less fiscal support will limit spending. 

PM Datanote: US Consumer Confidence, May 2026

Consistent with renewed labor market weakness.

27 May 2026 US Monitor Re-emerging positive wealth effect unlikely to prevent spending slowing

  • The increase in asset prices over the past year implies a one percentage point boost to consumption...
  • ..A bit less than rules of thumb imply, due to low confidence, already-low saving and high borrowing costs.
  • Real incomes probably will rise just 4% year-over-year in Q4, limiting spending growth to 1%%.

PM Datanote: US Housing Starts / Jobless Claims

Flat trend in permits points to relapse in starts soon.

PM Datanote: US FOMC Minutes, April 2026 Meeting

On hold for now, but the likelihood of easing further ahead in underrated.

22 May 2026 US Monitor Supply chain disruptions are lifting orders and pushing up goods prices

  • Manufacturing firms appear to be bringing forward orders to get ahead of supply chain disruptions… 
  • …That will lift industrial activity, but only in the short term; upward pressure on goods prices is building.
  •  The outlook for homebuilding remains dim; we expect real residential investment to fall in 2026.

May - US Economic Chartbook

REAL INCOMES WILL DROP THIS SUMMER...

  • ...CORE INFLATION WILL COOL IN Q4, ENABLING RATE CUTS

21 May 2026 US Monitor Cutting out the noise: How to tell if consumption is booming or faltering

  • Online searches for furniture and household goods are surging, and Redbook’s data look red-hot...
  • ...But Bloomberg’s Second Measure data—a better guide to spending—point to an emerging slowdown.
  • …That subdued steer is echoed by falling airline pas- senger numbers and weak consumer confidence.

20 May 2026 US Monitor The fiscal sugar rush for households is over; meager rations lie ahead

  • Current fiscal plans imply low-income households will be squeezed by policy in 2027.
  • The President’s budget proposal entails more pain for households, to part-fund higher military spending.
  • Congress will temper proposed cuts to nondefense spending, but households likely still will be worse-off.

PM Datanote: US NAHB Housing Market Index, May 2026

Rising mortgage rates and low confidence are stifling demand.

19 May 2026 US Monitor The drag on labor demand from AI still looks manageable

  • AI-driven layoffs still look limited, but productivity gains seem to be limiting hiring in a few sectors.
  • This drag on labor demand, however, looks relatively small compared to the broader AI economic boost.
  • We still think AI is more likely to shift the composition of labor demand than depress it significantly.

PM Datanote: US Industrial Production / Empire State Survey

Supply-chain risks prompting a rush of activity and greater price pressures.

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U.S. Document Vault, independent macro research, Pantheon Macro, Pantheon Macroeconomics, independent research, ian shepherdson, economic intelligence,