Q2 Rebound is No Big Deal

President Trump announced higher tariffs were on the way almost as soon as he took office. As a result, businesses focused on buying foreign goods in advance, to front run those tariffs, putting some of their purchases from domestic producers on the backburner. The result was a massive surge in imports in Q1 that made trade the largest drag on real GDP growth for any quarter since at least the 1940s.

Now trade has gone in reverse, with purchases shifted back to US producers, which means trade will make a large contribution to real GDP in Q2 and real GDP will rebound sharply. How much it will rebound will be unclear until Tuesday morning, when we get a report on June trade and inventories, which could lead to substantial revisions in our forecast.

In the meantime, we are forecasting 3.0% annualized growth in Q2 versus a consensus expected 2.4%. But don’t get too excited if we’re right. Real GDP has averaged 2.0% per year the past twenty years, so one quarter with 3.0% growth after a quarter of -0.5% is not a sign of an economic boom.

Consumption: Auto sales declined at an 8.6% annual rate in Q2 while “real” (inflation-adjusted) retail sales excluding autos rose at a 1.0% rate and real service spending appears up at a 1.0% pace. This brings our estimate of real consumer spending on goods and services, combined, to a 0.5% rate, adding 0.3 points to the real GDP growth rate (0.5 times the consumption share of GDP, which is 68%, equals 0.3).