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US retail sales post biggest drop of 2025 as tariffs and economic worries bite

US retail sales post biggest drop of 2025 as tariffs and economic worries bite

First Post18-06-2025
Amid warnings of a grim second half of the year, US retail sales fell 0.9%. The worse-than-expected decline coincided with decline in manufacturing and loss of home-buyer sentiment to lowest in three years. read more
US retail sales fell 0.9 per cent in May — worse than the economists' expectation of a 0.6 per cent fall. This is
This was the sharpest monthly decline in retail sales since January and the second consecutive decline after sales fell 0.1 per cent in April.
The retail sales decline is one of the many adverse markers that economist and business leaders interpret as a sign of incoming troubles.
The adverse markers have emerged at a time when US President Donald Trump's trade policies, primarily driven by tariffs, have sown uncertainty in global trade and have plunged the United States into fears of inflation — or something worse known as 'stagflation' in which inflationary and recessionary pressures coexist.
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Industrial production falls, home-builder sentiment lowest since 2022
Beside retail sales decline, industrial production fell 0.2 per cent in May for the second time in three months. The fall in industrial production is a sign that the uptick in economic activity in the first quarter is now over.
The 0.2 per cent decline was more than 0.1 per cent forecast by economists in a survey conducted by Wall Street Journal.
The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index, which measures home-builder confidence, fell to the lowest since 2022.
In retail sales as well as industrial production, automobile sector was the only promising sector. Manufacturing rose 0.1 per cent in May compared to 0.5 per cent contraction the previous month on the back of a jump in automobile production. Excluding automobiles, manufacturing fell 0.3 per cent.
Trump's tariffs are doing little to support investment in domestic manufacturing capacity by making foreign-produced goods less competitive, said Samuel Tombs, the Chief US Economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, to MarketWatch.
Foreign companies may also be hesitant to source US-manufactured goods out of concern that their governments may impose new tariffs if the trade war intensifies, Tombs further said.
In May, vehicles and parts output increased 4.9 per cent.
Retail sales fell 0.3 per cent excluding automobiles. This was worse than the estimate of 0.1 per cent again.
'Americans bought cars in March ahead of tariffs and stayed away from car dealerships in May. Families are wary of higher prices and are being a lot more selective with where they spend their money. People are hunting for deals and aren't eager to buy unless they see a good one,' said Heather Long, the Chief Economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, told CNBC.
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Grim forecasts for second half — thanks to tariffs
In the midst of such markers, economists and business leaders have warned it is about to get worse.
Sal Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said, 'Trade-war uncertainty, rising input prices, and slowing US and global demand are expected to weigh on manufacturing activity this year. We are forecasting a large pullback in business-equipment spending in the second quarter following a first-quarter surge.'
Sam Bullard, senior economist at Wells Fargo, said the outlook for industrial production over the rest of the year 'is dim, as slowing economic growth and the strains of tariffs lead to quarterly declines over the final three quarters of 2025'.
Michael Pearce, the Deputy Chief Economist at Oxford Economics, told Reuters, 'Tariff announcements have had a clear impact on the timing of large-ticket purchases, notably autos, but there are few signs yet that tariffs are leading to a general pullback in consumer spending. We expect a more marked slowdown to take hold in the second half of the year, as tariffs begin to weigh on real disposable incomes.'
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The weakening of US dollar as a result of loss of confidence in the currency because of Trump's trade policies, is a sign 'that inflation will pick up this summer and into the fall as prices start to reflect the higher costs for goods from enacted tariffs' Ben Ayers, a senior economist at Nationwide, told the news agency.
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Fatal blast at US steel's Clairton plant sparks doubts over its future
Fatal blast at US steel's Clairton plant sparks doubts over its future

Business Standard

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  • Business Standard

Fatal blast at US steel's Clairton plant sparks doubts over its future

The fatal explosion last week at US Steel's Pittsburgh-area coal-processing plant has revived debate about its future just as the iconic American company was emerging from a long period of uncertainty. The fortunes of steelmaking in the US along with profits, share prices and steel prices have been buoyed by years of friendly administrations in Washington that slapped tariffs on foreign imports and bolstered the industry's anti-competitive trade cases against China. Most recently, President Donald Trump's administration postponed new hazardous air pollution requirements for the nation's roughly dozen coke plants, like Clairton, and he approved US Steel's nearly USD 15 billion acquisition by Japanese steelmaker Nippon Steel. Nippon Steel's promised infusion of cash has brought vows that steelmaking will continue in the Mon Valley, a river valley south of Pittsburgh long synonymous with steelmaking. We're investing money here. And we wouldn't have done the deal with Nippon Steel if we weren't absolutely sure that we were going to have an enduring future here in the Mon Valley, David Burritt, US Steel's CEO, told a news conference the day after the explosion. You can count on this facility to be around for a long, long time. Will the explosion change anything? The explosion killed two workers and hospitalised 10 with a blast so powerful that it took hours to find two missing workers beneath charred wreckage and rubble. The cause is under investigation. The plant is considered the largest coking operation in North America and, along with a blast furnace and finishing mill up the Monongahela River, is one of a handful of integrated steelmaking operations left in the US. The explosion now could test Nippon Steel's resolve in propping up the nearly 110-year-old Clairton plant, or at least force it to spend more than it had anticipated. 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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Bad news for Ratan Tata's TCS after massive layoffs, IT giant loses Rs 5.66 lakh crore due to..., worst phase for company since...
Bad news for Ratan Tata's TCS after massive layoffs, IT giant loses Rs 5.66 lakh crore due to..., worst phase for company since...

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Bad news for Ratan Tata's TCS after massive layoffs, IT giant loses Rs 5.66 lakh crore due to..., worst phase for company since...

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Corporate loan growth slows in April-June quarter as firms delay investments, shift to cheaper debt market
Corporate loan growth slows in April-June quarter as firms delay investments, shift to cheaper debt market

Indian Express

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Corporate loan growth slows in April-June quarter as firms delay investments, shift to cheaper debt market

Corporate loan growth by domestic banks slowed down in the first quarter of FY26, as companies put off investment decisions. This was largely due to uncertainty around tariffs, weak demand that held back private capital spending, and a shift towards cheaper funding options in the corporate bond market. Additionally, many companies continued to reduce their debt levels, which further dampened loan demand. Between April and June 2025, bank lending to industries grew at the slowest pace in over three years, signalling muted credit demand from the corporate sector. According to RBI data, loans to industries — including micro, small, medium, and large enterprises — rose by 5.49 per cent year-on-year to Rs 39.32 lakh crore, marking the weakest growth since March 2022. In Q1 FY26, the country's largest lender, State Bank of India (SBI), reported a 5.7 per cent Y-o-Y growth in its corporate loan book, but saw a fall of 3 per cent on a Q-o-Q basis. 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With access to cheaper funds through CP and corporate bond markets, along with strong cash flows, domestic corporates have continuously reduced their debt, resulting in slower corporate credit growth. 'Corporates having strong cash flows are deleveraging. So, the (credit) demand is not that much because there is a deleveraging happening on the corporate book,' Bank of Baroda's managing director and CEO, Debadatta Chand, said during an analyst meet for the quarter ended June 2025. Lenders have also become prudent in lending to corporates as they do not want to overexpose themselves while expanding their corporate loan book. 'Banks are mindful of risk-return tradeoff and focus on risk-adjusted returns which makes them quite sensitive to pricing. They are also mindful of concentration risk embedded in a corporate exposure,' said Fitch Ratings' Guha. 'While lenders are trying to be more prudent in ensuring that their risk-adjusted returns on corporate exposure are justified, they can do so because retail and small business lending continues to grow healthy,' he said. Banks are hopeful of a stronger growth in corporate advances from the third quarter of the current fiscal. While SBI expects its corporate loan book to grow by 10 per cent in Q3 of FY26, Bank of Baroda is confident of achieving a 9-10 per cent growth in the segment during FY26. 'The shift (for funding from banks to the debt market) has happened, but I think these shifts keep happening. Once the rates stabilize on the bank side, they (corporates) will come back to utilization (of their working capital limits),' the SBI Chairman said. Setty said SBI has a robust visibility on the corporate loan pipeline in terms of proposals under discussion, and on sanctions which are yet to be disbursed. The bank has a total corporate loan book pipeline of Rs 7 lakh crore. For large-scale capex-led funding requirements, corporates will have to return to the banks, as the bond market alone will not be adequate to fulfill those needs, Guha said.

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