Monday, May 5, 2025

What's Next?

 Financial FAQs

The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the second quarter of 2025 is 1.1 percent on May 1, down from 2.4 percent on April 30.”

What’s next for economic growth? Predictions for Q2 are all over the map since the first quarter GDP went negative with -0.3% GDP growth because businesses boosted their imports ahead of future price hikes caused by the tariffs, and imports are subtracted from exports in the Gross Domestic Product calculation.

The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow Q2 growth estimate of +1.1 percent gives us an idea of what’s to come. It has already fallen sharply from +2.4 percent because of the negative Q1 surprise, as well as the drop in consumer spending (PCE) and real private fixed investment (e.g., factories), all signs of further slowing.

I see stagflation on the economic horizon, rather than an actual recession since wherever the import taxes being negotiated end up to be, it will raise prices. And the service sector of our economy is still expanding, that includes the leisure, healthcare and transportation sectors.

The Institute for Supply Management said that its service-sector PMI rose to 51.6% in April from 50.8% in the prior month in the largest sector of our economy. The measure of new orders rose to 52.3% in April from 50.4 in the prior month. And the measure of prices paid for services for inputs jumped to 65.1 from 60.9 in the prior month, which is the inflation component of stagflation.

However, Q2 growth is uncertain because no one knows what the tariffs will be (i.e., import taxes). If Q2 GDP should also contract it could indicate we are in a recession, since two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth have been one tell of a recession.

Torsten Slok, Apollo Global’s chief economist interviewed on CNBC’s Squawk Box predicts if the high tariffs that were. put in place earlier this month remain in effect, odds of a two-quarter contraction in economic output stand at 90 percent, with gross domestic product dropping by 4 percentage points.

But Trump knows this so he will probably bring the tariffs down to the 10 percent minimum already being levied on all 180 countries in the world (that include penguin only islands).

Trump has probably calculated this will ultimately bring in enough tax revenues to enable the tax cuts he wants enacted for his Oligarchs. The rest of Americans will suffer, however, as the budget negotiations will demand spending cuts to everything else except the military and immigration services

So we shouldn’t ignore a recession possibility, since China is the elephant in the room, and could derail everything, since it accounts for most of the holiday season imports, for starters. And any manufacturing renaissance will be years in the offing.

Declining Gross Domestic Product growth isn’t the only measure of recession. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), the official caller of recessions, adds several other indicators, such as when nonfarm payrolls, personal incomes, and industrial production have peaked in a business cycle.

The NBER, a board of top economists, makes the recession call by looking at peaks and troughs of business activity. The last recession was caused by the COVID-19 pandemic shutdown and came after the longest post WWII expansion in history, said the NBER.

The committee has determined that a peak in monthly economic activity occurred in the U.S. economy in February 2020. The peak marks the end of the expansion that began in June 2009 and the beginning of a recession. The expansion lasted 128 months, the longest in the history of U.S. business cycles dating back to 1854.”

And small businesses, who thought Trump would bring some relief from regulations as well as lower prices, do not like what they are seeing, I said last week. The National Federation of Independent Business on Tuesday said its Small Business Optimism Index dropped 3.3 points in March to 97.4, falling just below its 51-year average of 98.

Marketplace, a public radio show, said the U.S. Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to the Trump administration this week saying that tariffs pose “significant risks to U.S. employment” and may soon do “irreparable harm” to many small businesses. 

The Chamber, which represents businesses of all sizes, is asking the administration to lift tariffs on any goods that “cannot be made in the U.S.,” establish a tariff exclusion process and automatically exempt small business importers from tariffs.

The problem is that President Trump believes he can use tariffs to wall us off from our allies and trading partners. But wanna be autocrats, such as Trump, are terrible at running economies. The best examples are Turkey’s President Erdogan or Putin, whose economies still suffer from double-digit inflation.

They make decisions for the wrong reasons, because they don’t have to please everyone, just their Oligarchs. But an era of stagflation as happened in the 1970s could cause as much suffering, so stay tuned. Whether recession or prolonged stagflation, it won’t be pretty.

Harlan Green © 2025

Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen

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