Financial FAQs
The Conference Board Leading Economic Index® (LEI) for the US ticked down by 0.1% in May 2025 to 99.0 (2016=100), after declining by 1.4% in April (revised downward from –1.0% originally reported). The LEI has fallen by 2.7% in the six-month period ending May 2025, a much faster rate of decline than the 1.4% contraction over the previous six months.
Are we already in a recession? The Fed doesn’t think so, but the Conference Board’s Index of Leading Economic Indicators conjectures we will be in a recession soon, if not already. The LEI is a tricky read because it looks at indicators spanning longer periods, hence its name.
The Conference Board’s index of Leading Economic Indicators is now signaling that a recession might have begun in May 2025, though Fed Chair Jerome Powell and the Fed Governors don’t think so. Powell said after last Wednesday’s FOMC meeting that interest rates will stay on hold for now.
“The economy is in solid shape, so the labor market is not crying out for a rate cut,” said Powell. (Therefore, the Fed has time to “learn” more about the economy.)
However, Justyna Zabinska-La Monica, Senior Manager, Business Cycle Indicators, at The Conference Board, said “With the substantial negatively revised drop in April and the further downtick in May, the six-month growth rate of the Index has become more negative, triggering the recession signal,”
The Conference Board creates several surveys, including the Consumer Confidence Index, so it puts the most weight on consumer expectations for business conditions, which has been dropping sharply in its surveys.
And the ISM’s New Order Index as well as private housing building permits have continued to decline as well, thanks to the Fed’s intransigence on reducing interest rates further.
So the LEI is hedging its bets just as the Fed is doing by taking a longer wait and see. “The Conference Board does not anticipate recession, but we do expect a significant slowdown in economic growth in 2025 compared to 2024, with real GDP growing at 1.6% this year and persistent tariff effects potentially leading to further deceleration in 2026.”
Federal Reserve President Chris Waller, one of the Fed Governors, is a dissenter: “I don’t think [the inflation impact of Trump’s tariffs] is going to be that big,” Waller said in an interview on CNBC. “I think we have room to bring [rates] down in July (the next FOMC meeting)”
Almost everyone in congress and President Trump also want lower rates because the new fiscal budget’s annual interest expense could be close to $1 trillion annually on approximately $38 trillion in debt.
This is unsustainable, so everyone is waiting to see if the Republican congress succeeds in driving the U.S. economy over the cliff with their new fiscal budget. Then what good will any amount of import taxes (tariffs) do to fill the debt void?
It’s becoming evident that Republicans will do anything to get their tax cuts, and Democrats don’t seem to be shouting loud enough to win at least two Republican House members to their side that don’t want to bankrupt the U. S. economy.
That’s all they require to block the looming budget disaster. This is while it looks like Trump’s tariffs will ultimately equal those in 1930. And we know the 1930 Smoot-Hawley tariffs that raised prices on imports was one of the reasons for the Great Depression.
Harlan Green © 2025
Follow Harlan on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen
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