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A Warning Signal, Not a Panic Button: What the LEI Decline Says About the U.S. Economy in 2025 — and Why India Should Watch Closely

In June 2025, the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Index® (LEI) for the U.S. dropped 0.3%, marking its third consecutive monthly decline and a 2.8% fall for the first six months of the year. However, the coincident index—a more real-time indicator of economic well-being—moved modestly upward, and lagging indicators held steady. Still, the persistence of the LEI’s downslope is causing economists, policymakers, and investors to sit up and take note. 

This does not call for panic—yet. But it should ring loud alarm bells, reminding us that the U.S. economy is inching toward the slow-growth zone, increasingly vulnerable to external shocks and internal imbalances. We may not be in a recession, but the warning lights are flashing. 

Broad-Based Slowdown 

This steady downward drift in the LEI suggests weakening momentum that can no longer be dismissed as seasonal noise or sector-specific turbulence. Unlike previous cycles’ transitory dips, the current drag appears systemic. Weak consumer expectations, shrinking new manufacturing orders, and rising initial jobless claims are all red flags. Whether powered by post-pandemic stimulus or corporate earnings, the U.S. economy just isn’t cruising anymore. 

Notably, the LEI’s drop in the first half of 2025 was more than double that of the second half of 2024—implying deterioration, not stabilization. Despite a robust stock market—the only major component buoying the index—fundamentals are eroding. And when equity markets are the sole pillar, it often signals a disconnect between financial optimism and economic reality. 

Stock Market Optimism Isn’t the Whole Economy 

The LEI is not just a measure of sentiment; it’s a composite of ten forward-looking indicators that have historically signalled economic turning points. When eight out of ten show declines—as the six-month diffusion index now reflects—the writing is on the wall: momentum is fading. 

The June report cites rising unemployment insurance claims, weakening new orders, and declining consumer confidence—an ominous trio. Sustained over several months, these indicators typically precede broader slowdowns. That the Conference Board has recorded a “recession signal” for three straight months is highly significant—this is the threshold where many economists shift from “watchful” to “wary.” 

And yet, the Conference Board refrains from declaring a recession. Why? Because the coincident index, which tracks real-time factors like employment and production, still shows modest growth. The CEI’s 0.3% increase in June suggests deceleration, not contraction. 

Tariffs and the Second-Half Risk 

Perhaps the most crucial detail in the Conference Board’s assessment isn’t historical—it’s predictive: the impact of tariffs. With GDP growth expected at just 1.6% in 2025, any weakening of consumer spending in the second half of the year due to rising prices could tilt the scales. This is especially concerning given that consumption has underpinned U.S. growth over the past two years. 

If inflationary pressures from tariffs persist and consumer sentiment erodes further, even a modest dip in real incomes or employment could prompt contraction. That’s a risk central banks and finance ministries around the world—including in India—must closely track. 

India Cannot Remain Immune 

While the LEI is a barometer for the U.S., its ripples are global. India, increasingly integrated with Western economies through trade, tech, and capital flows, cannot afford to ignore signs of stress in the world’s largest economy. A U.S. consumer pullback or financial tightening would impact Indian exports, foreign investments, and potentially, remittance flows. Moreover, in a year when India is eyeing manufacturing exports and tech-led growth, a U.S. slowdown could disrupt demand pipelines. 

India’s policymakers must factor in these evolving conditions when shaping monetary and fiscal policy for the remainder of the year. With the RBI maintaining a cautious stance amid volatile global cues, it would be prudent to revisit growth assumptions and external sector vulnerabilities in light of the LEI’s downtrend. 

Where Does This Leave Us? 

This is a moment for realism. Both U.S. policymakers and global market participants must resist the temptation to treat financial markets as a proxy for economic fundamentals. The LEI’s decline does not confirm a recession, but it signals increasingly fragile growth. 

The prudent response is to monitor—not minimise—the risks. The Fed must maintain its data-dependent stance and prepare contingencies in case consumer demand deteriorates more rapidly than expected. U.S. lawmakers need to reassess the downstream effects of tariffs on household budgets and business sentiment. 

Conclusion 

The drop in the U.S. Leading Economic Index is not a declaration of recession—it is a flashing yellow light. Gains in the stock market cannot offset weaknesses emerging in manufacturing data, labour trends, and consumer confidence. With GDP growth slowing and tariff impacts looming, economic stakeholders must tread with caution. 

For India, too, the message is clear: global headwinds demand domestic prudence. The time for unbridled optimism is over—what lies ahead must be navigated with vigilance, agility, and above all, realism. 

Wem India

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