Logins

eAdvantage

Login

eMPF

Login

AHP Online

Login

Safekeep Direct

Login

From the Desk - Economic Commentary

Scott Hofer, Member Strategies Manager - 5/21/2026

U.S. stocks opened lower this morning, giving back some of the previous day’s strong gains, with the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq all slipping modestly in early trading. The weakness was primarily driven by macro pressures rather than company-specific news as oil prices jumped back above $100 per barrel and Treasury yields moved higher, both of which tend to weigh on equities by increasing inflation concerns and tightening financial conditions. Investors are reassessing Federal Reserve policy expectations as recent data and Fed commentary point to persistent inflation risks, raising the possibility of higher-for-longer interest rates. 

In economic data releases today, today’s initial jobless claims report showed a modest decline in new unemployment filings and continued overall labor market resilience. For the week ending May 16, 2026, initial claims fell by 3,000 to 209,000, coming in slightly below expectations of around 210,000. This level remains historically low and is consistent with a labor market where layoffs are still limited, even as hiring has cooled compared to prior years. The four-week moving average edged down to roughly 202,500, reinforcing the view that claims are stable rather than trending upward. Meanwhile, continuing claims rose slightly to around 1.782 million, suggesting it may be taking longer for unemployed workers to find new jobs even though job losses themselves remain subdued. Overall, the report points to a “low-fire, low-hire” environment, which gives the Federal Reserve flexibility to stay focused on inflation risks without urgent concern about labor market deterioration.

Next, the April 2026 U.S. new residential construction report showed a modest pullback in homebuilding alongside a rebound in permitting activity. Housing starts declined 2.8% month over month to a 1.465 million annualized pace, down from a strong, upwardly revised March level but still about 4.6% higher than a year earlier, reflecting resilience despite softer momentum. Single-family construction was notably weak—falling 9% from the prior month—while multifamily starts surged, offsetting part of the decline and continuing to drive volatility in the headline figure. In contrast, building permits rose 5.8% to a 1.442 million annualized rate, recovering from March’s sharp drop, although still roughly flat compared with a year earlier. The mix within permits echoed the starts data: single-family authorizations slipped, while multifamily permits increased meaningfully. Overall, the release suggests a housing sector that remains constrained by elevated mortgage rates and affordability pressures, with near-term construction activity easing but forward-looking permit data showing some stabilization.

In addition, today’s Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey signaled a sharp and unexpected deterioration in regional factory activity for May 2026. The headline general activity index plunged from 26.7 in April to -0.4, falling into slight contraction territory and missing expectations by a wide margin, marking the weakest reading of the year. The decline was broad-based across key demand and production components. New orders dropped into negative territory (-1.7) and shipments fell significantly (to 4.9), indicating a sudden slowdown in both incoming demand and current output after several months of expansion. Employment conditions remained soft, with the index still negative at -2.8, suggesting ongoing, though moderate, job contraction, even as it improved slightly from the prior month. Meanwhile, price pressures eased but stayed elevated, with the prices paid index declining to 47.9 and prices received to 26.3, consistent with moderating cost inflation. Despite the weak current snapshot, the survey’s forward-looking indicators were more upbeat. Firms’ expectations for activity over the next six months strengthened further, with the future general activity index rising to a high level, reflecting continued optimism about a rebound later in the year even as near-term conditions softened materially.

And rounding out releases this morning, the S&P Global flash U.S. Composite PMI indicated that private sector activity continued to expand at a modest pace in May, with the index holding steady at 51.7, unchanged from April and still above the 50 threshold that signals growth. Activity has therefore remained resilient but relatively subdued compared with earlier in the year, reflecting a softer overall expansion backdrop. The report highlighted a clear divergence across sectors. The manufacturing PMI strengthened notably to 55.3, its fastest growth rate in over four years, supported in part by strong new orders and some precautionary stock building by firms amid ongoing geopolitical and supply concerns. In contrast, the services PMI edged down to 50.9 from 51.0, pointing to near stagnant growth in the services sector, with new business inflows only modest and the sector on track for one of its weakest quarters since late 2023. Overall, the May release suggests that while the U.S. economy continues to expand, the pace is uneven and increasingly reliant on manufacturing strength, as services activity softens and broader demand conditions remain constrained by geopolitical uncertainty and cost pressures.


Subscribe to our daily From the Desk newsletter to get economic commentaries and updated market rates sent directly to your inbox. 

Subscribe Here