(0/-) The advance estimate of real GDP for the first quarter came in a bit weaker than expected, at an annualized +2.5%. It was better than last quarter’s +0.4%, but a bit slower than the +3.0% consensus estimate. However, some of the underlying figures were improved (which is why this is considered more of a ‘neutral’ than ‘negative’ assessment).
Within the dataset itself, things looked a bit better. Personal consumption expenditures were stronger than expected at +3.2% (vs. a forecast of +2.8%), business fixed investment rose just over +2% and final sales rose. Inventory investment added +1.0% to the bottom line, which stood in contrast to the negative impact it made in Q4. What accounted for the slight disappointment? Government spending continued to look weak with both pre-emptive cuts and sequester effects, shaving almost 1% off of GDP—the biggest part of which being defense spending. The trade deficit widening (more imports than exports) caused a further 0.5% takeaway. As you can see, those smaller numbers start to add up after a while.
From a pricing standpoint, the GDP price index grew +1.2%, a tenth of a percentage point under forecast and the Core PCE price index rose by the same amount (a tenth-percent above estimates). These show that input costs remain contained. Continue reading








