19 April 2024

US GDP Unchanged at 1.1% for 2nd Quarter 2013

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Construction spending rose 0.4% month over month in April which left Q2 GDP tracking estimate unchanged at 1.1% quarter over quarter. Significant revisions to prior months were a small negative for the Q1 tracking estimate, subtracting 0.1pp, concentrated in the private non-residential component. Previously, revisions to wholesale and retail inventories, published on Friday, were, on the whole, mildly positive for Q1 GDP growth, adding a tenth to our tracking estimate.  

Release date 

Indicator 

Period 

Q1 tracking 

Q2 tracking 

16-May

CPI

Apr

2.6

1.7

16-May

Housing starts

Apr

2.6

1.5

24-May

Durable goods orders

Apr

2.6

1.4

30-May

GDP

Q1-2nd

2.4

1.4

31-May

Personal spending

Apr

2.4

1.4

31-May

Retail sales revisions

--

2.3

1.1

31-May

Inventory revisions

--

2.4

1.1

3-Jun

Construction spending

Apr

2.3

1.1

3-Jun  

Vehicle sales 

May 

--  

--  

Source: BEA

US Manufacturing Falls Below 50 in May

The US manufacturing ISM fell to 49.0 in May, below consensus estimate of 51.0 and after a print of 50.7 in April. The decline was broad-based, as there were sharp drops in production (48.6, previous: 53.5) and new orders (48.8, previous: 52.3). The employment index was little changed, with a print of 50.1 (previous: 50.2), but remains below its six-month average of 52.2. Surveys of manufacturing activity were mixed in May; while the ISM, Philadelphia Fed, and Empire State indices printed below their breakeven levels, the Chicago PMI showed a strong improvement and the Markit PMI moved further into expansionary territory.  Incoming data should determine whether they suggest a slowing in Q2 manufacturing activity growth or an outright contraction.  

US Construction Remains Bumpy  

Construction spending increased by 0.4% m/m in April below the consensus forecast of 0.9%. A gain in the private non-residential component (2.2%) offset declines in private residential (-0.1%) and public outlays (-1.2%), which is a sizeable revision to prior months number. For example, private residential construction now appears to have been somewhat stronger during Q1 – up 3.8% in February and 1.4% in March (previously 2.3% and 0.4%) – but private non-residential outlays were notably weaker – down 2.3% in February and 1.1% in March. Both trends were partly reversed in April, suggesting that the path of the construction recovery in the private sector remains bumpy, albeit on an upward trajectory. Meanwhile, public sector outlays remain subdued, with declines at both federal and state & local levels in April and in Q1 as a whole.  

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