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Philly Fed Eases in May After Strong April

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The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s State Coincident Indexes declined modestly in May, as the three-month diffusion index fell to 84 from 96 in April, with four states, Alabama, Connecticut, Kentucky and Hawaii posting index declines. The indexes of the remaining 46 states increased over the three month period. Delaware, Idaho, Massachusetts, and South Carolina posted the strongest three-month index gains in the month. The exhibit below is reproduced from the press release.

Maryland Goes Ratings Shopping

While this story is a few days old, it remains troubling and deserves a post. The State of Maryland recently dropped Moody’s, which had downgraded the state from Aaa to Aa1, from its rating agency roster. It then promptly dialed-up Kroll Bond Rating Agency to replace Moody’s and serve as the state’s third triple-A rating after S&P and Fitch. Not surprisingly, state officials have reportedly insisted that Moody's downgrade had nothing to do with the fact that it was dropped. While the Moody’s downgrade caused the state to temporarily lose its “triple-triple” bragging rights, the designation is a ridiculous thing for state officials to obsess about because, while it might make good copy for press releases, in reality, nobody really cares about it outside of maybe a few people at a National Association of State Treasurers conference. And it would have been more palatable if state officials had just admitted that the downgrade was the reason it pulled the plug on Moody’s. Instead, ...

Governing Magazine Looks at the Western Water Crisis

Very good article from Governing Magazine about the impact of reduced Colorado River flows on Southwestern states, particularly Arizona. It’s well worth a read. The seven states that share the Colorado River water have been unable to agree on a framework to replace the existing water sharing agreement when it expires at the end of this year. Meanwhile, the flows in the Colorado River Basin continue to decline and reservoirs are well below capacity. As a result of the failed negotiations, the US Bureau of Reclamation will have to impose a set of guidelines on the states, and Interior Secretary Doug Burgum has been quoted as saying that "nobody will be happy". Hopefully, Governing will continue to publish follow-up articles on this very important topic.  

NASBO Releases Spring Fiscal Survey of States

To paraphrase Steve Martin in The Jerk , “The Fiscal Survey of States is here, the Fiscal Survey of States is here!”. The National Association of State Budget Officers released its Spring 2026 Fiscal Survey of States today. For anyone with a keen interest in state fiscal affairs, this is your bible.

Beige Book: Most Districts See Modest Increases in Activity

Most of the District commentary in today’s Federal Reserve Beige Book read the same. Ten of the twelve Federal Reserve Districts reported modest increases in economic activity, with Philadelphia reporting a slight decline and San Francisco posting unchanged conditions. All Districts however, reported flat, stable, low hire/low fire labor markets. Manufacturing activity was generally reported stronger, but consumer spending was mixed, with K-shaped consumption evidenced across all Districts. The high-income consumers continue to spend freely, with “unapologetic luxury” spending noted in the Atlanta District. At the same time, moderate income consumers are reducing trip frequency and generally “squeezing more life out of every dollar before deciding to spend it” as one Kansas City District respondent put it, while the lower income tier is struggling. Ports remain under some pressure from tariffs and fuel prices, although the comments from the New York and Atlanta Districts in that regar...

UCLA Anderson: Top Risk Shifts From Tariffs to Oil

The “outlook for California is slightly weaker than it was three months ago” according to the latest UCLA Anderson Forecast . The Forecast projects that California’s “bifurcated economy” will continue to outperform the US in terms of output and income growth, but that this will be principally driven by the AI, aerospace and tech industries, while the other sectors of the state's economy will struggle. The authors note that California’s unemployment rate has been above 5% for 27 months, indicating a challenged labor market, and that the state is disproportionately affected by high energy prices due to its low emissions fuel mix requirement and its significant energy-dependent trade, transportation, and logistics sectors. At the same time, they cite the negative impact of current federal immigration policy on the state’s important construction sector. The Forecast calls for non-farm payroll growth of 1.2% in 2026 and 1.5% in 2027.