Macroeconomics

Macro Overview

Quick read across labor, inflation, risk, housing, growth, policy, yield curve, and financial conditions.

Labor Tight
Inflation Re-accelerating
Liquidity Expanding
Risk Monitor Yellow
Yield Curve Normal

Macro Regime

Reflation

Growth is solid but inflation remains elevated or sticky.

Reflation
Growth 0.15
Risk 56
Inflation Re-accelerating

Labor Market

UNRATE Apr 2026: 4.3%

Prime-age E/P: 80.7%

Tight
Openings / Unemployed 0.9x
Claims trend (13w) -7.8%
Prime-age E/P YoY +0.4%
Prime-age 3m ann. -0.5%

Inflation & Real

CPI YoY: 3.9%

Core PCE YoY: 3.2%

Re-accelerating
5y Breakeven 2.6%
10y Breakeven 2.4%
5y Real Yield 1.6%
10y Real Yield 2.1%

Net Liquidity

Net Liq: $5.93T

Fed Balance Sheet - TGA - RRP

Expanding
13w Change +2.7%
RRP 3.3B

Risk Monitor

Risk Score: 56

Recession prob: 1.8%

Yellow
10y - 3m 0.89%
10y - 2y 0.49%
VIX 17.4

Housing & Credit

Months' supply: 8.5 months

Benign
Mortgage 30y 6.51%
HY OAS pct. 15%

Growth Composite

Growth score: 0.15

NAPM: —

Accelerating
WEI 2.99
INDPRO YoY 1.4%
Retail YoY 4.9%

Policy Stance

FFR: 3.6%

Real FFR: +0.4%

Easy
Taylor proxy 6.2%
Policy gap -2.6%
Real FFR +0.4%

Yield Curve

10y-3m: 0.89%

10y-2y: 0.49%

Normal
10y - 3m 0.89%
10y - 2y 0.49%

Financial Cond.

NFCI: -0.52%

Chicago Fed Financial Conditions

Loose
NFCI Score -0.52%
5y Rank 21%

Methodology

How we assemble the macro overview

Every card is sourced from primary FRED series that we normalize to month-start frequencies and render in the same Plotly theme. Badges use transparent, rule-based thresholds so you can quickly tell whether a complex macro stack is improving or deteriorating.

Key FRED inputs

  • Labor inputs — Unemployment rate, job openings, size of the civilian labor force, prime-age employment ratio, and weekly jobless claims.
  • Inflation inputs — Headline and core CPI, core PCE, trimmed-mean PCE, median CPI, breakeven inflation expectations, real 5y/10y yields, and the effective fed funds rate.
  • Risk inputs — 10-year vs 3-month and 10-year vs 2-year Treasury spreads, Conference Board LEI, state coincident breadth, and initial claims momentum.
  • Housing inputs — 30-year mortgage rates, national home price index, wage proxy, high-yield credit spreads, consumer loan delinquencies, months' supply, bank credit, and new home sales.
  • Growth inputs — Nonfarm payrolls, real consumption, capacity utilization, ISM manufacturing, industrial production, retail sales, core durable orders, and real GDP.
  • Policy inputs — Fed funds rate, core PCE, NAIRU vs unemployment gap, real vs potential GDP, financial conditions index, and the Federal Reserve balance sheet.
  • Yield curve inputs — Treasury yields from 1 month through 30 years plus the derived term spreads.
  • Financial conditions inputs — Chicago Fed financial conditions index and its five-year percentile.

Regime vocabulary

Labor (Tight / Loosening / Cooling)
Score ≥ +1 when unemployment is falling, the openings-to-unemployed ratio stays above 1.2, and claims trend lower; score ≤ −1 when the opposite is true.
Inflation (Cooling / Sticky / Re-accelerating)
Short-horizon core PCE is compared with the 12‑month pace as well as trimmed-mean and median gauges.
Risk (Green / Yellow / Red)
A z-scored composite of LEI YoY, the 10Y-3M spread, state breadth, and claims momentum is clipped to a 0‑100 scale.
Housing (Benign / Tightening / Stressed)
A 60-month z-score of HY OAS, mortgage rates, delinquencies, and months' supply dictates the label.
Growth (Accelerating / Flat / Slowing)
Average YoY growth across industrial production, retail sales, core goods orders, and real GDP determines the badge.
Policy (Easy / Neutral / Tight)
Policy gap = Fed funds minus a Taylor proxy plus a check on the real FFR; NFCI percentiles label financial conditions (Loose / Neutral / Tight).
Yield curve (Normal / Flat / Inverted)
The 10Y-3M spread above 20 bps is Normal, between 0 and 20 bps is Flat, and below 0 bps is Inverted.

Additional context

  • Weekly releases (claims, HY OAS, NFCI) update intraday once FRED posts; monthly and quarterly data refresh after the 8:30 a.m. ET prints.
  • Sparklines show the most recent 36 months, and percentile ribbons reference rolling five-to-ten-year windows for historical context.