Weekly Economic Snapshot: Fed Holds Steady Amid Services Growth & Record Trade Gap

Last week featured a light economic calendar, with the Federal Reserve holding its benchmark interest rate steady for the third consecutive meeting as the main headline. Key data releases included the continued expansion of the U.S. services sector in April and a significant surge in the international trade deficit to a record high in March. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 snapped its nine-day winning streak but still managed mid-week gains, influenced by ongoing trade discussions.

ISM Services

The U.S. services sector continued to expand in April, marking its tenth consecutive month of growth. The ISM Services PMI unexpectedly rose from 50.8 in March to 51.6 in April. The index was expected to inch down to 50.2. Three of the four components that factor directly into the PMI were in expansion territory last month, with employment as the sole subindex in contraction. Additionally, three of the components increased from the previous month, with business activity as the sole subindex experiencing a decline. The services sector has now expanded in 55 of the last 58 months, dating back to June 2020. However, respondents continued to cite concerns around tariffs and federal agency budget cuts and how they will impact businesses moving forward.

ISM Services PMI

Trade Deficit

The U.S. international trade deficit widened to a record high in March as imports rose more than exports. The trade deficit increased 14.0% to $140.5 billion, larger than the $136.8 billion deficit forecast. Imports rose by $17.8 billion (4.4%) to $419.0 billion while exports rose $0.5 billion (0.2%) to $278.5 billion. These are the highest levels on record for both imports and exports.