KEY POINTS
  • Cortera, which analyzes business-to-business spending, shows spending remains depressed compared to last year, but there are some green shoots in June transaction data.
  • Spending data showed the reversal of some stay-at-home spending trends as more restaurants reopened and people returned to their jobs.
  • Overall spending was still down 10.9% from last year but up about 2.7 percentage points from May, with gains in manufacturing and transportation spending.
An employee works to make ventilators at the General Motors Components Holding Plant that is manufacturing ventilators for use during the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Kokomo, Indiana, April 30, 2020.

Business spending showed some signs of green shoots in June, as manufacturers bought more equipment and spending shifted away from stay-at-home sectors to ones that could rebound in a reopening economy, according to Cortera, a software company which analyzes business-to-business credit transactions.

But overall June spending was still depressed, down 10.9% from the same month last year, and up just 2.7 percentage points from the 13.6% decline in May year over year, according to the company.