- Unchanged monthly levels extend weakness earlier this year.
- Core price gain slows y/y.
- Final demand price index is steady; services prices decline.
U.S. Producer Price & Core Price Indexes Hold Steady in June
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
More Commentaries
- USA| Jul 15 2025
FRBNY Empire State Manufacturing Index Jumped 22 points in July
- The first positive reading for the index since February.
- The July jump reflected widespread increases across components.
- Evidence of some nascent supply-chain problems.
- Outlook six months ahead continues to brighten.
by:Sandy Batten
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Jul 15 2025
U.S. Energy Prices Remain Mixed in Latest Week
- Gasoline prices stabilize.
- Crude oil prices increase slightly.
- Natural gas prices ease.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- Europe| Jul 15 2025
EMU IP and Sectors Recover
Output jumped in the European Monetary Union in May. The main gain followed a 2.2% drop in April that was preceded by a 1.8% increase in March. There's been some turbulence in output over the last few months with April showing declines for all the major sector components.
Moving beyond monthly data, the sequential run of growth rates from 12-months to 6-months to 3-months shows that total industrial production is on an accelerating path from 3.8% over 12 months, to over 5% over six months as well as over three months. Manufacturing alone shows a 12-month 3.6% growth rate, rising to 4.7% over six months and to 5.8% over three months.
Sectors Sectors show a trend toward acceleration in consumer goods production where a 10.3% growth rate over 12 months progresses to 20.1% over six months and only backs off to 18.5% over three months. Splitting consumer goods output into durables and nondurables, we find less strength among durables with flat performance over 12 months, a 3.7% annual rate decline over six months, and a 4.3% annual rate increase over three months. However, for nondurables the growth rate surges from 11.6% over 12 months to 23.1% over six months and stays over 20% over three months. Intermediate goods’ trend is the fly in the ointment for industrial production, as output falls by 1.7% over 12 months, falls at a 2% pace over six months, and then falls at a 4.9% annual rate over three months. That setback is surprising given the growth rate and other categories. Capital goods show a strong accelerating phase from 4.1% over 12 months to a 5% growth rate over six months to 15.5% over three months.
Countries Looking across specific countries, the table shows 13 monetary union members in May - Seven of them show output contracting. That's the same number contracting as in April although in March only four showed industrial output contracting month to month.
The sequential growth rates calculated over broader periods show eight countries with output contracting over three months, but only five with output contracting over six months; six countries report lower output over 12 months – a much longer span of time.
Mixed trends within the community The sector data for all of the Monetary Union are relatively upbeat, but the country level data show a lot more mixed performance across individual country units; only Ireland, Finland, and Germany show output increases over three months, six months and 12 months. Conversely, Greece, France, and Belgium show output declines over three months, six months and 12 months.
The quarter-to-date (QTD), with two months of data in hand, is showing six countries with output declining on QTD-to-date basis. But for the EMU region as a whole, output is advancing at a 1.6% annual rate. Manufacturing output is rising at a stronger 1.9% annualized pace – with real strength in capital goods output.
Ranking performance The far right-hand column ranks current growth rates on data back to 2007. Seven of thirteen countries rank below 50% which is their median growth rate for the period. Finland, Ireland, and Portugal are quite strong; Malta and German have rankings solidly above their respective 50th percentiles. The Netherlands, Italy, France, and Austria have rankings in their 40th percentiles, lagging their median pace but in a 40% to 50% range. Belgium emerges as the weakest country on a ranking basis, standing only in its lower 8.7 percentile and it is riding a losing streak to boot.
Overall EMU IP rankings are solid-two sectors lag Overall EMU rankings show total output with a 66.1 (top one-third) percentile ranking with manufacturing at 59.6 percentile. Consumer nondurables are the strongest sector at a 98.2 percentile ranking. Both consumer durables and intermediate goods have lower standings: 40.8% for consumer durables and 37.6 percentile for intermediate goods. Both of those sectors are lagging and also carrying weak momentum. In contrast, capital good output is surging and its ranking at 47.7% is mostly below its median rank (at 50%).
Stimulus diverted? NATO has signed on for more miliary spending and this has been expected to underpin growth in Europe. But some of that stimulus will be redirected in just-announced deal in which the U.S. will manufacture arms and NATO would pay for them to help Ukraine. It is unclear how much stimulus that we had expected for Europe might be redirected to the U.S. by this new deal.
- Prices increase broadly after earlier declines.
- Metals price strength is accompanied by higher oil costs.
- Lumber prices surge but natural rubber prices decline.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- Japan| Jul 14 2025
Japan’s IP Is Still Waffling and Weak
Japan's industrial production continues to be weak with output falling by 0.2% in May after falling by 1% in April and coming up lame - at flat - in March. Sequential growth rates are not telling an upbeat story either, with 12-month industrial production lower by 0.8%; over six months the decline is only 0.2% at an annual rate, but then over three months the annual rate of decline is 4.6%.
Manufacturing shows similar weakness to the trend for overall industry, but the three-month growth rate is at -5.7% at an annual rate.
Two key industries for Japan, textiles and transportation, show up with the declines over all three horizons. And for transportation, the decline over the last three months is 11.1% at an annual rate.
Manufacturing industries in Japan show a great deal of variation with consumer goods output on a more or less accelerating path, growing 3.2% over 12 months and then up to a 12% annual rate over three months. Intermediate goods output is in a significant decelerating phase, falling 3% over 12 months, falling at a 1.2% annual rate over six months and then stepping up the pace of decline to -6.6% at an annual rate over three months. Investment goods show a good deal more life, falling only 0.1% over 12 months, then growing at a 3.9% annual rate over six months and surging at a very vibrant 8.3% annual rate over three months.
Mining activity in Japan is recovering, showing a 6.8% annual rate decline over 12 months, a 5% annual rate decline over six months, and an 11% annual rate increase over three months.
Utilities output from gas and electric utilities shows a decline of 1% over 12 months, growth of 2.3% over six months. and then output declined at a 19.2% annual rate over the last three months.
- USA| Jul 11 2025
U.S. Federal Government Posts Budget Surplus in June
- Federal receipts strengthen while outlays decline.
- Customs duties increase but interest payments slow.
- Year-to-date deficit increases.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- USA| Jul 11 2025
U.S. Housing Affordability Weakens in May
- Home prices & mortgage rates continue to rise.
- Median income declines.
- Affordability falls across country.
by:Tom Moeller
|in:Economy in Brief
- France| Jul 11 2025
French Inflation Moves Up But Stays Low
French inflation jumped in June, rising by 0.4% in the month on the HICP metric, the same as the monthly rise for France’s CPI and its CPI excluding energy. Not surprisingly the monthly diffusion reading tracks the breadth of inflation rise monthly to 72.7% in June affirming that the breadth of the gain in monthly inflation was substantial. Breadth is sharply higher in June after looking very weak at 18.2% in May. But the month of May followed a broad acceleration with breadth at 90.9% in April. Monthly breadth reading can be quite unstable. Diffusion values above 50% revel inflation acceleration period a period in which inflation acceleration is more common than deceleration.
However, breadth over the sequential periods 3-months, 6-months and 12-months shows inflation acceleration is creeping up as the breadth reading advances on the timeline from 36.4% over 12 months, to 54.5% over 6 months, and to 63.6% over 3 months.
France has been an inflation success story and a growth failure story. The HICP headline inflation last higher than 2% in August 2024 and the domestic CPI excluding energy was over 2% for its 12-month gain in March of 2024. And while the HICP has signs of ongoing slowing, the domestic CPI excluding energy has been relatively stable since September 2024. The CPI excluding energy inflation is running at a weak and well contained pace of 1.6% over 12 months and the weakening HICP undoubtedly has benefited from the ongoing drop in energy prices where Brent costs in euro-terms show an 18.5% drop over 12 months.
The headline HICP for France shows a mixed trend from 12-months to 6-months to 3-months. The domestic CPI is closer to showing steady acceleration. The CPI excluding energy shows persistent acceleration. But the domestic CPI gauge also shows inflation at a pace of just 2.2% over 6 months and 2.6% over 3 months compared to a low 12-month pace of 1.6%. The acceleration in French inflation is mild and the pace of inflation is really controlled.
- of2641Go to 1 page