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Plus: The Fed holds steady, with a potential rate hike coming. 
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The Federal Reserve held its key interest rate steady today, but half of policymakers saw a rate hike ahead as the central bank tries to get control of rising inflation. That’s a stark change in posture from the last meeting, and a striking start to Kevin Warsh’s term as Fed chair.

President Donald Trump has heaped unprecedented pressure on the Fed to make money cheaper, and Warsh’s predecessor Jerome Powell alleged the White House ginned up a criminal investigation to drive down rates. So what did Trump have to say about his new appointee holding fast? “It’s all right, whatever.” The markets were less blasé, we’ll get into that reaction below.

But first, let’s do some numbers. At last check Americans were paying 4.2% higher prices in May from the year before, while average hourly earnings only rose 3.4%. Today we learned U.S. consumers bought 6.9% more stuff in that same period. Retail therapy, anyone? — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A woman walks by a store with merchandise on display.
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
How are consumers still spending?
Overall retail sales in May were up 0.9% from the month before, much more than economists expected. Marketplace’s Mitchell Hartman looked at what exactly people are buying, and how.
The U.S. consumer is resilient, unvanquished, indefatigable.

The May retail sales report, out today from the commerce department, says as much. Overall sales were up 0.9% from April, way more than economists expected despite high inflation, high interest rates and geopolitical uncertainty.

Of course, some of that spending comes from soaring gas prices driven by war in Iran. Consumers spent 3.4% more at gas stations in May than they did in April, and 26% more than they did in May 2025. But spending was strong in most other categories too, like furniture and e-commerce.

We’ve seen this pattern repeat over decades.

“When the American consumer is faced with a hit to their real incomes, they tend to absorb that hit, lower their saving rate, and maintain spending levels, rather than cut back on discretionary spending,” said Thomas Ryan, an economist at Capital Economics.

That’s exactly what happened in April: When gas shot up, the savings rate went down. Kathy Bostjancic, senior vice president and chief economist at Nationwide, told us she expects Americans saved even less discretionary income in May.

“Consumers do feel miserable,” she said. “They’re not happy with higher energy prices.”
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Wall Street really didn’t like the prospect of higher interest rates later this year. The S&P 500 closed down 1.2%, the Dow dropped 1% and the Nasdaq lost 1.3%.

  • SpaceX had its first down day since its massive IPO, with shares down nearly 5% today. It’s still neck and neck with Amazon’s market cap.

  • Yum Brands stock yo-yoed a few points yesterday and today after announcing it would sell off Pizza Hut, citing changing consumer tastes.

  • Brent crude rose to $79.55 a barrel, way down from a couple weeks ago but still elevated from before President Trump attacked Iran. The national average gas price fell again to $4.02 a gallon.
More on retail
  • We visited hobby shops, where the data shows consumer spending is way up. One store owner suggested that customers want to escape the news.

  • Will people buy a $1,400 iPhone? That’s one estimate of “pro” model price hikes given the rising cost of chips. Outgoing Apple CEO Tim Cook confirmed today that the company will be raising prices soon.
Family life
  • America added about 2 million new households in 2021, according to one measure. In 2025, it was about half that. Experts point to the high cost of buying one’s own place, but fewer households could drive up housing costs further.

  • More than half of U.S. families have two parents that work, according to new Pew data, way up from a decade ago. But working parents say their attention is severely split, and lines between kid work and work-work are blurry.

  • Here’s what real parents are spending on child care and activities this summer.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“We've had reports that there are horses sitting in the Texas stockyards at the Mexico border [plus] horses for racing, for ranch work, sales horses, camp horses, all kinds of stuff.”
— Emily Stearns of the American Horse Council
Ranchers on both sides of the border are contending with screwworms, little flies that will essentially eat an animal alive if untreated. After the Trump administration delayed efforts to mitigate the pest, infestations threaten not only cattle but also horses. The pause on livestock exports and imports has ripple effects on many industries.
READ MORE
Get your life together!
Join host Reema Khrais and the rest of the "This Is Uncomfortable" team for a virtual meet-up to cross that financial task off your to-do list!
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Fed Chair Kevin Warsh enters his press conference today.
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Final note
"Good day"
That’s how Kevin Warsh greeted viewers at his first press conference as Fed chair. It’s a departure, the Wall Street Journal noted, from his predecessor Jerome Powell, who said “good afternoon.” 
When we told you this week that reporters, economists and gamblers scrutinize every word of these pressers, we meant it.
 
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