GDPNow Forecast Dives To -1.0 Percent Following Income And Spending Data

GDPNow data from the Atlanta Fed, chart by Mish

GDPNow data from the Atlanta Fed, chart by Mish

The Atlanta Fed GDPNow Model forecast took yet another dive today. 

The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the second quarter of 2022 is -1.0 percent on June 30, down from 0.3 percent on June 27. After recent releases from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis and the US Census Bureau, the nowcasts of second-quarter real personal consumption expenditures growth and real gross private domestic investment growth decreased from 2.7 percent and -8.1 percent, respectively, to 1.7 percent and -13.2 percent, respectively, while the nowcast of the contribution of the change in real net exports to second-quarter GDP growth increased from -0.11 percentage points to 0.35 percentage points.

The previous forecast was on June 27 at 0.3 percent. The model rose from 0.3 percent to 0.7% on June 28 on Advance Economic Indicators (inventories and international trade in goods). 

What Matters 

The overall number is not what matters although the -1.0 percent estimate looks ugly.

What does matter is real final sales. The rest is inventory adjustment that nets to zero over time. That number is still an acceptable 1.5 percent, assuming it holds. 

But how likely is that?

All About Revisions 

I have been harping for two month that I expect negative revisions. 

We subsequently had negative revisions to retail sales and today to personal consumption expenditures.

Are CFO's in la-la land expecting positive GDP? 

At least, they are not telling us the "Consumer is Strong."

Personal Income and Outlays 

Bloomberg Econoday consensus, highlights and annotations by Mish.

Bloomberg Econoday consensus, highlights and annotations by Mish.

I am not sure what some of these economists are smoking with expectations ranging all the way up to a 1.1% rise in PCE. 

We already had negative revisions to retail sales in May, so why would PCE rise? 

It didn't, in real terms. And as expected and announced by me in advance, we had negative revisions and then a weak report on top of it.

The net result of all the activity since June 27 was a dive in the baseline estimate to -1.0 percent. 

However, and more importantly, the GDPNow forecast of Real Final Sales only declined to +1.5%. 

That's not recession territory if it holds, but why would it?

Looking Ahead

Looking ahead, I expect more weak numbers and more negative revisions. 

The second quarter ended today, But the data lags. 

We have a key ISM number next week, another retail sales report, more housing reports, and another personal income and outlays report. 

Look at the trend folks. Where is it headed? And there is still a month's worth of data coming in. 

Personal Income and Spending: The Latter Much Weaker Than Expected in May

Meanwhile please note Personal Income and Spending: The Latter Much Weaker Than Expected in May

Real PCE decreased 0.4 percent in May; goods decreased 1.6 percent and services increased 0.3 percent. And we had big negative revisions to April. 

I've Seen Enough, the US is in Recession Now, Q&A on Why

On June 22, I commented I've Seen Enough, the US is in Recession Now, Q&A on Why

This report and the negative BEA revision to first-quarter GDP strengthens my conviction that recession started no later than May.

It's possible a recession started in the first quarter given negative BEA GDP revisions,

On June 29 I commented The Odds of Recession Starting in the "First" Quarter of 2022 Just Leaped

Despite a huge negative Q1 revision, I am still sticking with May as the recession start. See the above links for an explanation.

Powell: "We understand better how little we understand about inflation”

In case you missed it please see Powell: "We understand better how little we understand about inflation”

Powell: “Is there a risk we would go too far? Certainly there’s a risk. The bigger mistake to make, let’s put it that way, would be to fail to restore price stability.

Powell is committed to whipping inflation even at the expense of recession. That means a recession is now baked in the cake, sooner not later.

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