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Inflation is too high and growth is too slow. That’s basically what you need to know from the new economic data out today. If that persists, well, there’s a word for it. We’ll do the numbers below, tell you about a K-shaped market for office space to go with the K-shaped economy and look at a new effort to put President Donald Trump’s face on U.S. currency. First, my colleague Daniel Ackerman explains one more alarming number from today’s data drop: The personal savings rate. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor
A 3D illustration of a pink piggy bank on its back with black Xs for eyes.
farakos/Getty Images
Americans are saving less as prices rise
Some are left without a safety net, yet there’s no wide-scale decline in spending.
The personal savings rate — that is, the portion of Americans’ disposable income that gets saved or invested — was just 2.6% in April, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said today.

That’s down more than half a percentage point from March, and down 1.7 percentage points from the start of this year, marking the lowest rate since June 2022.

“This is really reflective of continued impacts of inflation,” said Ted Rossman, principal analyst at Bankrate. “People are just not saving much at the end of the month.”

That makes it harder for households to weather a job loss or a costly car repair.

“The consumer is essentially running out of that buffer,” said Ryan Sweet, chief global economist at Oxford Economics. “That safety net is starting to get depleted.”

In many cases, Sweet said that safety net is gone altogether, meaning more household debt.

“We start to get concerned that consumers will turn to using credit cards, which we've already seen,” he said.

“The consumer is essentially running out of that buffer,” he said. “That safety net is starting to get depleted.”

In many cases, Sweet said that safety net is gone altogether. That means more household debt.

“We start to get concerned that consumers will turn to using credit cards, which we've already seen,” he said.

And that could cause people to fall behind on payments, Sweet said. But even as savings dwindle, consumers — especially with higher incomes — have kept on spending. Rossman said that hasn’t always been the case.

“Normally, when people are stressed about the economy, they pull back on things,” he said. “They stop traveling, they stop going out to eat.”

Rossman said that the fact there hasn’t been a pullback on a wide scale could mean consumers think the current spike in oil prices won’t last.

“We keep hearing, from the president and others, that war’s going to be over soon, gas prices are going to come back down,” he said. “I do wonder if some people are pulling more of the short-term lever about, ‘OK, I’ll dip into my savings for now,’ but it’s a short-term adjustment they’re willing to make.”

Still, the savings rate is less than half of what it was two years ago.
READ MORE


 
News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Corporate profits lifted the stock market to fresh highs today. The S&P 500 added 0.6%, the Dow rose less than 0.1% and the Nasdaq climbed 0.9%, all records.

  • Consumers spent 0.5% more in April than the month before, even though disposable income fell, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said today. That’s where that lower savings rate comes in. 

  • The economy grew more slowly in the first quarter than originally estimated. The government revised estimated gross domestic product growth down from 2% to 1.6%. Learn why the BEA tweaks its estimates over and over.
 
Energy
  • A barrel of Brent crude oil fell below $94 today, with news that the U.S. and Iran reached an agreement to extend the ceasefire (it still needs the president’s OK.) A gallon of regular gas averaged $4.42.
  • But oil inventories are near record lows, and Exxon Mobil warned Brent prices could spike up to $160 for a physical barrel when reserves are gone. In March, the International Energy Agency said it would release a record 400 million barrels of oil to mitigate shipments blocked from passing through the Strait of Hormuz. 
 
Work
  • A popular AI hiring tool is less likely to advance Black and Asian applicants, a new study from Stanford University found. Researchers said the tool, from Pymetrics, discriminated against Black applicants in about 25% of jobs and against Asian applicants in about 15% of jobs.

  • Companies leased more office space than they let go for the third quarter in a row, according to new data, but  only the high-end spaces are doing well. More of the older, less-desirable buildings are being converted into apartments or knocked down.



QUOTE OF THE DAY
“So many farmers are reporting, you know, that they're kind of on the brink of a crisis situation.”
— Aaron Lehman, fifth-generation farmer and president of the Iowa Farmers Union
American farmers and ranchers are staring down a lot of financial pressure: rising fuel and fertilizer prices from the war in Iran, tariffs, and drought. Fertilizer for Lehman’s medium-size farm has increased about $20,000 so far this year, he said, and his labor and health insurance costs are also soaring. With income falling, cash-strapped farmers face tough choices, like selling land or livestock, finding a second job, or closing altogether.
HEAR MORE
Economic reporting shouldn't be out of reach. Your gift ensures everyone can make sense of the economy.
Two men in suits hold a mock-up of a $250 bill with Trump's portrait in the middle of it.
Rep. Andy Barr, left, a Kentucky Republican, and U.S.Treasurer Brandon Beach. (Photo via Barr’s X account)
Final note
$250 party favor
President Trump wants a $250 bill with his image on it to commemorate the country’s 250th birthday. But permitting a living person’s image on U.S. currency would take an act of Congress, so a Texas lawmaker introduced a bill last year requiring Trump’s face on Benjamins.

That hasn’t moved forward, but planning has: Treasury Department appointees have pressed the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to design the bill, providing mock-ups from a British painter. Take a look here. Even if the law was on Trump’s side, it can still take years of prep work from the Federal Reserve and Secret Service before a new note enters circulation.

With inflation this stubborn, maybe $250 will be the new $100 by then.
 
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