Pantheon Macroeconomics

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US Publications

Below is a list of our US Publications for the last 6 months. If you are looking for reports older than 6 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.

4 February 2025 US Monitor Unusually cold weather likely depressed January payroll growth

  • We look for a 125K increase in January payrolls, well below the 170K consensus.
  • Survey indicators present an incoherent picture, but unusually cold weather likely hit employment.
  • The small fall in continuing claims points to a stable unemployment rate, but the risks are to the upside.

Samuel TombsUS

PM Datanote: US Employment Cost Index, Q4

The case for softer services inflation remains intact.

Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US

3 February 2025 US Monitor A growth scare looms, as tariffs hit and the saving rate rebounds

  • The tariffs imposed by Mr. Trump will lift consumer prices by 0.6%, if they are maintained.
  • Recent strong growth in consumption can be largely attributed to preemptive purchases of imports.
  • A sub-4% saving rate is unsustainable; expect sub-2% GDP growth soon, as consumption growth slows.

Samuel TombsUS

PM Datanote: US GDP, Q4

Tariff front-running prompts a surge in consumption; capex hit by Boeing strike.

Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US

PM Datanote: US Weekly Jobless Claims, January 25

Continuing claims consistent with flat unemployment in January.

Samuel TombsUS

PM Datanote: US Advance Goods Trade, December

Net trade and inventories likely dragged heavily on Q4 GDP growth.

Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US

31 January 2025 US Monitor Consumption underpins solid GDP growth, but for how much longer?

  • GDP rose by 2.3% in Q4, and measures of underlying momentum were even stronger...
  • ...But growth is now extremely dependent on consumption, which likely will slow markedly from here. 
  • Expect a modest 0.8% rise in the Q4 ECI today, and smaller increases over coming quarters.

Samuel TombsUS

PM Datanote: US Durable Goods Orders, December

Aircraft likely drove a plunge in equipment investment in Q4.

Oliver Allen (Senior US Economist)US

30 January 2025 US Monitor Don't mistake "a little language clean up" for a FOMC view shift

  • Chair Powell said revisions to the FOMC’s statement were “not meant to send a signal”.
  • We’re revising our Q4 GDP growth forecast to 1.5%, from 2.0%, due to weak trade and inventories data.
  • Federal government payrolls could easily drop by between 100K and 200K by October. 

Samuel TombsUS

29 January 2025 US Monitor GDP growth still solid, but the cracks are becoming clearer

  • We think GDP rose by around 2% in Q4, driven mainly by another strong increase in consumption.
  • Tariffs muddy the waters, but we expect growth to be much weaker this year than in 2024.
  • The FOMC is unlikely to signal less easing after only one month’s better than expected labor market data.

Samuel TombsUS

28 January 2025 US Monitor Support to spending growth from credit will unravel by mid-year

  • People are using credit, despite its high cost, to bring forward big-ticket purchases to avoid tariffs.
  • Credit cards supported spending growth by 0.2pp in Q4; expect a similar boost in Q1, then a hefty drag.
  • Business investment probably will continue to stagnate over the next few quarters.

Samuel TombsUS

27 January 2025 US Monitor The idea of a post-election "vibes" shift is unsupported by surveys

  • Business confidence is net unchanged since before the election, while consumers are more downbeat.
  • PMI data signal strong growth in January payrolls, but other indicators point to renewed weakness.
  • We doubt Mr Trump can engineer a both boom in oil output and much lower rates in the short term.

Samuel TombsUS

January 2025 - US Economic Chartbook

RISING UNEMPLOYMENT TO SPUR FURTHER FED EASING…

  • …INFLATION WILL STILL FALL UNDER MOST TARIFF SCENARIOS

Samuel TombsUS

24 January 2025 US Monitor Housing inflation is set to slow gradually, rather than collapse

  • Ignore the Q4 plunge in the BLS new tenant rent index; it is usually revised up sharply...
  • …CPI housing inflation still looks set to slow this year, contributing to a fall in overall core inflation.
  • California wildfires lifted initial claims last week, but the pick-up in continuing claims has deeper roots.

Samuel TombsUS

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