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Weekly Transportation Update: Real consumer spending rises in May after downward revisions.

Economic indicators were mixed this week with an increase in real consumer spending, no change in non-automotive retail inventories, lackluster new orders for durable manufactured goods, and a sharp drop in sales of new homes.

The week also brought some notable developments at the two major parcel carriers and a safety oversight report on last year’s train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio.

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Weekly Transportation Update: Manufacturing output rises in May and is basically flat y/y

The industrial and consumer sectors saw decent performances in May, but the housing sector remained quite weak as both construction and sales declined. Manufacturing output posted a solid gain. Retail sales barely moved in nominal terms, but a significant issue was pricing for consumer commodities, which declined 0.2% m/m in May.

Another pricing move in the latest week was not so encouraging for freight transportation as diesel prices rose for the first time in 10 weeks.

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Weekly Transportation Update: May sees no inflation at either the consumer or producer level

Inflation in April was nonexistent for consumers while pricing within the supply chain declined m/m. Despite “modest further progress” toward achieving the target of 2% inflation, the Federal Reserve held interest rates steady at this week’s meeting.

Closer to the freight sector, two pricing developments were especially notable. Pricing for freight brokers rose sharply in May while prices for commercial auto insurance premiums has accelerated. Carriers and shippers are seeing some relief, however, as diesel prices fell for a ninth straight week..

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Weekly Transportation Update: U.S. adds 272,000 payroll jobs in May; unemployment ticks up

In May, the U.S. economy showed mixed signals. It added 272,000 payroll jobs, but job openings hit their lowest since February 2021. Manufacturing weakened, as seen in the ISM index. On the positive side, real international trade in goods rose in April, and mortgage rates dipped below 7%. Diesel prices fell for the eighth week, while for-hire trucking lost 5,400 jobs despite increased CDL hiring. Truck spot rates stayed stable, and the rail sector saw growth in most carload commodities and year-over-year intermodal growth..

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