US Consumer Borrowing Unexpectedly Drops by Most Since 2024
Total credit outstanding decreased by about $182 million in May after sizable increases in the prior two months, Federal Reserve data showed Wednesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a $17.5 billion advance.
The pullback was driven by a $5.3 billion decline in credit-card and other revolving debt outstanding, which also marked the biggest decline since 2024. Non-revolving credit, such as loans for vehicle purchases and school tuition, rose $5.1 billion in May. The report doesn’t include mortgages. (…)
The data suggests Americans are beginning to pay down some debt after the biggest back-to-back increase in consumer borrowing in more than three years. (…)
China Weighs Limits on the AI Models American Companies Love Beijing talks to top companies about protecting their technology after it wins fans in Silicon Valley
Across Silicon Valley, models made by Chinese companies such as DeepSeek and Moonshot AI have become core to daily work at companies large and small, offering a less costly alternative and supplement to the products of OpenAI and Anthropic.
Chinese officials have recently held discussions with domestic AI labs that produce the country’s most powerful models about how to safeguard their valuable proprietary technology, according to people familiar with the matter. Beijing is concerned that sharing some of this technology could help adversaries or other malicious actors and ultimately get weaponized against China, the people said.
Beijing’s recent moves show it is revising its AI priorities in the race with the U.S.
Until recently, Beijing wanted to encourage the rapid spread of Chinese AI models globally, believing this represented a form of Chinese soft power. Many leading Chinese models are open-source, meaning anyone around the globe can download them without charge and generally use them with few restrictions.
The new thinking: Not all technology should be open to everyone.
Sharing of technology, including through open-source releases and research papers, may expose technical secrets. Some Chinese innovations, such as techniques that allow AI models to use computing power more efficiently, have been adopted by Western AI labs. (…)
Andy Fang, co-founder of DoorDash, said in an X post Tuesday that his company routed the most complex tasks to Anthropic’s cutting-edge model Fable—a public version of Mythos—while delegating lower-level workloads to Kimi K2.6 from China’s Moonshot AI. DoorDash separately said the approach delivered better performance at a lower cost than using two Anthropic models.
Staff at legal-services platform Harvey typically turn to top models from OpenAI, Anthropic and Google to complete high-stakes tasks, said Niko Grupen, head of applied research at Harvey. For simpler work, lower-cost alternatives from Chinese companies such as DeepSeek and Zhipu have become the go-to models.
Startup Vercel said DeepSeek’s share of AI usage rose to 23% in June from 1% in April on the Vercel platform, while DeepSeek’s share of AI spending stayed in the low single digits. (…)
Officials are considering requiring labs to defer public releases and restrict access by certain tiers of users, such as foreign entities, if a review determines their products contain sensitive technology, the people said.
China is also looking at tighter restrictions on exporting some AI technologies and on Chinese AI companies’ accepting foreign investment, some of the people said. They said officials have consulted recently with Chinese companies and researchers to identify areas where China has developed a technology edge.
Such discussions are still in the early stages, the people said. Reuters earlier reported some exchanges between Chinese officials and companies.
Any moves by China to tighten its grip on domestic models could risk alienating foreign users and slow global adoption, industry participants said.
Companies need to implement AI agents to be/stay competitive and Chinese models provide the lower cost tools to make the AI investments financially acceptable.
Without Chinese models to process the more mundane AI tasks, many companies will curb their AI enthusiasm, slow down innovations, at the risk of diminished competitiveness (more sophisticated or less costly products or processes) against others with larger budgets or access to lower cost tools.
This is the bigger risk to an otherwise exploding compute demand.
Without the ability to keep AI development costs reasonable, demand will decline and Western AI builders will need to accept lower margins and reduce their prices.
The US-China conflict risks jeopardizing AI growth.
Who has the best hand? The West with its better frontier models or China with its lower cost models?
According to this chart, US frontier models are now only 3% better than Chinese models:

But in the AI world, 3% is still verry meaningful.
Serious AI development must use the best frontier LLMs whose cost per million tokens (below) are multiples above Chinese costs (note the compressed scale). But without the lower costs tools, many will find AI investing too onerous.

In this cost/benefit race, the American/Chinese combo allowed for fast development. Without it, the whole AI pyramid is in danger.
And so is the US economy:
(KKR)
BCA Research illustrates how non AI-related demand is weak in the USA:
Meanwhile,
Fed Officials Flagged Risks That Would Warrant Higher Rates More officials pointed to the AI build-out as a source of persistent inflationary pressures
Federal Reserve officials broadly agreed at their meeting last month that they would need to raise interest rates if inflation stays elevated this year. They also agreed that they could stay on hold if price pressures fade soon, according to minutes of that meeting released Wednesday.
Which of those paths they take depends on something they haven’t resolved: whether the forces pushing up prices will last.
The minutes showed how they are increasingly focused on a source of inflation that barely figured in their debates a few months ago: the boom in artificial-intelligence investment. It was one of the forces, along with the war in the Middle East and tariffs, that could keep prices elevated and tip the Fed toward a rate increase, according to the written account. (…)
Still, investors read last month’s meeting, the first under Chairman Kevin Warsh, as a step toward higher rates because of interest-rate projections showing a larger contingent anticipating hikes. Nine of 18 meeting participants penciled in at least one rate increase by December; none had done so in March. Only one anticipated lower rates, down from 12 in March.
Even the most hawkish officials weren’t pushing to act. A few participants saw a case for raising rates at the June meeting, according to the minutes, but supported holding—a sign that the split visible in the projections was less about what to do now than about how the outlook might unfold.
Warsh didn’t submit a projection, but his repeated vow to deliver price stability—with no accompanying signal of patience—reinforced the impression of a committee leaning toward tightening. (…)
“Several participants commented that price pressures had become more broad based, with a large share of goods and services…experiencing substantial increases,” the minutes said. (…)
Several have noted that a year ago, the Fed could treat tariff-driven price increases as one-off and let them pass through without a policy response because the labor market was soft enough to justify the patience. Now, with hiring steadier and fresh cost pressures arriving from energy and AI at once, that same instinct to wait carries more risk that above-target inflation gets entrenched. (…)
The most important statement:
“Most participants pointed to scenarios in which, in the context of stable labor market conditions, inflation would remain elevated due to strong AI-related demand, the conflict in the Middle East, or the effects of tariffs. In such scenarios, almost all of these participants indicated that some policy firming would likely be warranted.”
Also meanwhile,
Chinese Officials Gauge US Truce, Elections in Low-Key Meetings
A pair of former Chinese diplomats visited the US last month to better understand the Trump administration’s stance on a fragile trade truce, according to people familiar with the matter, as China seeks to gauge how upcoming US elections might affect ties.
Former Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai and ex-deputy UN representative Geng Shuang were among former and current Chinese officials who turned to American experts — including those previously with the Trump administration — in recent months to discern the White House’s intentions toward its adversary.
Their visit underscores how much uncertainty remains around the truce the two sides signed late last year and China’s concern that President Donald Trump may renege or refuse to deliver on some of its key components. (…)
In response to questions from Bloomberg News, the Chinese Foreign Ministry said more exchanges between China and the US are in line with the consensus of Xi and Trump.
“We hope that the US will work in the same direction and work with China to promote exchanges and cooperation between the two countries across all sectors and enrich the content of a constructive China-US relationship of strategic stability,” a spokesperson said. (…)
“Chinese officials are confident the truce can last, but confidence is not the same as certainty,” Da Wei, director of the Center for International Security and Strategy at Tsinghua University, said at a forum in Beijing. Da was recently in New York, where he said the mood among American scholars was “more pessimistic” than in China.
“Many people are asking how long this stability or truce can last,” he said. “My question is: Is this a truce or stability that is based on the goodwill of the two leaders or are there structural factors that shape this stability?” (…)
China’s Reflation Shows Signs of Peaking as War Shock Fades
Consumer inflation and the core gauge of prices both slowed more than expected from a year earlier, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics on Thursday. And while the effect of a low base from 2025 kept producer inflation on an upswing, factory prices declined 0.3% from May on a month-on-month basis, their first drop since July 2025.