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 Weekly Monitor

12 May 2026 US Monitor Retail sales likely held their ground in April, but look set to falter later in Q2

  • The hit to April sales from high gas prices and cooler weather likely was offset by strong tax refunds.
  • We look for a 0.4% increase in headline sales, and a further 0.2% uptick in the retail control measure.
  • Spending likely will slow sharply from May, however, as gas prices stay high and refunds taper off.

PM Datanote: US Existing Home Sales, April 2026

Stagnant, with no positive catalyst immediately in sight.

PM Datanote: US Michigan Consumer Survey, May 2026

The recent resilience in consumers’ spending probably is on borrowed time.

PM Datanote: US Employment, April 2026

A mixed bag; hiring indicators suggest a long wait for a substantial improvement.

11 May 2026 US Monitor Hiring plans too weak for recent payrolls momentum to be sustained

  • Payrolls have been flattered by the weather and a temporary burst of activity in the goods sector.
  • Most indicators of hiring intentions and expected wage growth have weakened in recent months.
  • The FOMC will be more worried about the labor market than inflation by the end of this year.

8 May 2026 US Monitor The core CPI likely rose 0.4% in April, but a slowdown should follow

  • The tariffs passed through fully to the CPI by March, but energy-driven goods price hikes will take time...
  • Used auto prices and airline fares probably jumped in April, while rents likely rose at twice their trend...
  • ...The BLS will use a calculation that will unwind its no-change assumption for rents last October.

PM Datanote: US JOLTS / ISM Services Survey

Labor demand still trending down, implying March payrolls jump was just a blip.

7 May 2026 US Monitor Supply chain fears are lifting activity, implying a longer wait for Fed easing

  • Oil consumption has risen despite soaring prices; goods producers are preparing for disruptions.
  • Surveys point to a bigger rise in core goods prices than implied by the rise in oil prices alone.
  • We still look for a further 75bp easing but we now expect the first cut in December, not September.

6 May 2026 US Monitor Labor demand remains too soft to embed the energy price shock

  • Weak JOLTS job openings in March push back against the theory that labor demand is picking up. 
  • Soft hiring and low quits signal limited second-round inflation risk after the energy shock. 
  • Mounting pressures on homebuilders suggest residential construction payrolls will start falling again.

PM Datanote: US New Home Sales, February/March 2026

Soft sales and high inventory point to price cuts and a drop in housing starts.

5 May 2026 US Monitor The AI boom won't prop up the economy all by itself

  • Tech capex is booming, but not all of this spending is AI-related, and much is spent on imports. 
  • We think the direct boost to GDP growth from AI investment likely is running at only around 0.2pp. 
  • Consumers’ spending and non-tech investment are weak, and are in need of more policy support. 

PM Datanote: US Advance GDP, Q1

Growth outside of the tech sector already was anemic ahead of the energy shock.

PM Datanote: US Income and Spending / ECI / claims

Spending temporarily supported by tax refunds; stagnation likely in Q2.

PM Datanote: US Housing Starts, February/March 2026

Spending growth probably still slowing, labor market still weak.

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.

PM Datanote: US Consumer Confidence, April 2026

Spending growth probably still slowing, labor market still weak.

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