Economic data was a bit lighter this past week, but the new Fed chair held his first meeting and offered plenty to unpack on the health of the economy and future interest rate policy. As such, this edition of the Weekly Market Summary includes updates on builder sentiment, home sales, retail sales, and the Federal Reserve meeting.

Bottom Line Up Front

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s message following his first Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting was clear: The Fed will be clearly focused on price stability above all else. The unanimous vote to hold rates steady—with no dissents—and a closing statement that reads, “The Committee will deliver price stability” signal an institution aligned around an inflation-first posture.

When it comes to interest rates, relief is unlikely anytime soon, and a hike remains a real possibility if inflation does not cooperate. The one constructive development: A deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz has oil tankers moving again, raising the possibility that the peak of energy-driven inflation is now behind us.

Gas prices are down notably from their May highs. That is welcome relief, but restocking depleted inventories will take months and risk premiums on tanker traffic through the region are unlikely to disappear quickly. For the auto industry, the near-term picture is one of stable but elevated financing costs, U.S. consumers under pressure, and a credit market that is consistently stretching to bridge the affordability gap.

Builder Sentiment and Home Sales

Builder sentiment fell in June and housing starts declined sharply, as affordability challenges continue to weigh on the housing market.

  • Builder confidence in the market for newly built single-family homes fell two points to 35 in June, according to the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index.
  • Housing affordability remains a key concern as builders face rising materials costs, and buyers wait for lower interest rates.
  • The percentage of builders cutting prices rose to 35% from 32% in May, though the average price reduction held steady at 6%.
  • The three index components were mixed in June, though all remained below the breakeven mark of 50. The current sales index fell two points to 38, the future sales index remained steady at 45, and buyer traffic was unchanged at 25.
  • Housing starts fell 15.4% month over month in May, dropping to an annualized rate of 1.18 million, the lowest level in six years. Starts were down 8.7% from the same period last year.
  • The decline in housing starts was led by a more than 40% drop in multi-family starts. Starts of single-family homes fell by 1.9% to the lowest level since September 2025.

Retail Sales

Retail sales showed stronger growth in May, as consumer spending rebounded from a slower April. Spending in the automotive sector also picked up after showing a month-over-month decline in April. The growth comes even as gas stations continue to see higher spending levels, even with the average price of fuel falling to near $4 per gallon, down 50 cents from the level seen in most of May.

  • Retail sales grew 0.9% overall in May compared to April. The headline rate shows growth of 6.9% year over year, the largest gain in well over a year.
  • Excluding autos, sales were up 0.8%. Core sales — which also exclude gasoline — rose 0.7% month, higher than the growth of 0.2% seen in April.
  • Gasoline station sales rose another 3.4% against April, rising for the fourth consecutive month. Gas station sales were higher by 26.5% against the same time last year.
  • Peak gas-price inflation may be in the rearview mirror, as the average price of a gallon of fuel has fallen in recent weeks.

Fed Meeting

The Federal Reserve held rates steady in its June meeting as the market expected. The real story from this meeting, however, was less about the decision and more about what the statement and projections revealed about where this Fed is headed. Under Fed Chair Warsh, communication was tighter and more direct than we’ve seen in recent meetings, closing with a line that stood on its own: “The Committee will deliver price stability.”

That is a statement of intent and provides a clear view of what the Fed is most focused on. U.S. consumers continue to cite inflation as a top worry, so this level of focus is no surprise. For the auto market, it’s unlikely we will see any rate relief soon, and there’s a real possibility the next move is up rather than down. And the unanimous vote to hold—without dissent—is a signal worth noting and suggests all members are aligned around an inflation-first posture.

Chair Warsh did not submit his own economic projections, leaving 18 dots on the dot plot, but the direction those dots moved tells the story: The Fed’s inflation outlook for 2026 increased from 2.7% in March to 3.6% in June on a Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) basis—a dramatic revision that goes a long way toward explaining why the probability of a rate hike is no longer a tail risk. When the Fed’s own forecast moves nearly a full point higher in three months, the bar for any rate cut rises considerably.

Beyond inflation, the broader June projections reflect a meaningful shift from March. The federal funds rate range for 2026 moved up sharply, with the lower bound rising from 2.6% to 3.4% and the upper end climbing 80 basis points to 4.4%. The 2027 range shifted higher by roughly half a point, and 2028 nudged up on the low end as well.

The range for GDP growth was trimmed modestly for 2026, while the projection for inflation was raised by almost a full point for this year to 3.6%. Altogether, the projections paint a picture of a Fed that sees inflation running hotter for longer and an environment that policy tightening may warrant.

Perhaps the most forward-looking development from this meeting was the announcement of five Fed task forces, covering communications, the balance sheet, existing data sources, productivity and jobs, and inflation frameworks.

Two of the task forces stand out when considering the Fed’s central issue with inflation over the last several years. The task force on “data sources” and the one on “inflation frameworks” together suggest the Fed is taking a hard look at whether its current tools are the right ones for the job.

The Fed has lagged inflation repeatedly in recent years, responding to price pressures after they were already entrenched. If these task forces lead to alternative data inputs or updated frameworks, the implication is a Fed that is trying to get ahead of inflation rather than react to it, a meaningful shift in posture that could shape policy decisions well into the next decade. It is a shift many American consumers would likely applaud.