Posted on 07/30/2014 6:11:49 AM PDT by mykroar
Moments ago the Commerce department reported Q2 GDP which blew estimates out of the water, printing at 4.0%, above the declining 3.0% consensus, as a result of a surge in Inventories and Fixed Investment, both of which added over 2.5% of the total print, while exports added another 1.23% to the GDP number. The full breakdown by component is shown below.
What is interesting is that the Commerce Department announced that as a result of incomplete June data, the biggest components of the GDP beat, Inventories and Trade, were estimated. In other words, assume that future revisions of Q2 GDP will be lower, not higher, as the actual data comes in, and especially as the CapEx data, which contrary to the GDP report, has not rebounded. Speaking of revisions, today the BEA also released its annual revision of all data from 1999 to Q1 2014, which made last quarter's -2.9% print a more palatable -2.1%, in the process throwing everyone's trendline calculations off as yet another GDP redefinition was implemented.
We are currently combing through the years of revisions and will provide a snapshot shortly but for the time being here is Bloomberg's take:
supplied with copious amounts of 0’Mullah’s Dep’t. of Truth “special sauce” no Doubt.
Analysis from Stone McCarthy Research:
Stone & McCarthy (Princeton) - This update contains our first impressions of the release of the U.S. GDP data. A full analysis will be available later as a separate update.
The BEA’s advance estimate of real GDP growth for Q2 2014 GDP growth was reported at 4.0% SAAR. The Q2 growth rate follows a 2.1% drop in real GDP in Q1 (previously -2.9%). The Q2 results were much stronger than expected. Consumer spending was firm, particularly for durable goods.
Non-residential fixed investment and exports also contributed to the gain.
Note: Previously reported data have been revised. The data incorporated in today’s report reflects the regular annual revision of the national income and product accounts (NIPAs), beginning with the estimates for the first quarter of 1999. Annual revisions, which are usually released in July, incorporate source data that are more complete, more detailed, and otherwise more reliable than those previously available.
Our estimate of 2.3% GDP growth compared with the median consensus of 3.0%. Market estimates ranged from 1.9% to 5.2%.
The FOMC is likely to regard the second quarter rise as a rebound from the soft first quarter. In the near-term it should not change the Committee’s overall outlook for winding down the asset purchase program, or advance the timing of the first hike in the fed funds rate.
Real PCE was strong, rising 2.5% in Q2 versus 1.2% in Q1.
In particular, PCE for goods rose by 6.2% SAAR versus 1.0% in Q1. However, PCE for services was 0.7%, down from +1.3% in Q1. The contribution to GDP from PCE was 1.69% versus our estimate of 1.1%.
Nonresidential fixed investment rose 5.5% versus +1.6% in Q1. Particularly, spending on structures rose 5.3%, up from +2.9% in Q1.
The contribution to GDP from inventories was +1.66% versus -1.16% in Q1 and -0.34% in Q4. We were expecting inventories to contribute 1.0% to GDP.
Exports made a positive contribution of 1.23% to GDP versus -1.30% in Q1.
The GDP price index rose at a 2.0% SAAR versus 1.3% in Q2 and 1.5% in Q1 2014.
LOL
wait 4-6 weeks for the ‘revised’ numbers and you’ll see it’s been a loss...again
(Checks Calendar....)
Yup. It’s an Election Year.
It’s always revised. And there’s a schedule. Here it is:
August 28 - 2Q14 1st revision
September 26 - 2Q14 2nd revision
October 30 - 2Q14 3rd revision and 3Q14 Advance
And there is no way it will be a “loss” (i.e. GDP negative growth). I’ll bet you $1000 on that right now.
BTW 1Q14 was revised up from -2.9% to -2.1%. 3Q13 and 4Q13 were also revised up.
WSJ:
Takeaways from Wednesdays GDP Report
Economic output rebounded during the second quarter, advancing at a 4% rate, and the large decline during the first quarter was revised down slightly, to a 2.1% decline from a 2.9% drop, according to estimates published by the Commerce Department on Wednesday.
Here are five quick takeaways from the report on gross domestic product, the broadest measure of goods and services produced across the economy:
30 Jul 2014 8:40am
Winter Rebound
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Wednesdays GDP report shows a big jump in consumer spending on durable goods, such as cars and appliances, during the second quarter, a sign that consumers may have been playing catch-up after a rough winter. Spending on total goods accounted for its highest contribution to GDP since late 2010, and spending on durable goods was near a five-year high, led by a big jump in autos. Business investment also rebounded, with non-residential fixed investment up 5.5% in the second quarter after a gain of 1.6% in the first quarter.
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Housings Hiatus
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Housing contributed positively to economic growth during the second quarterresidential fixed investment added 0.23 percentage point to GDPafter subtracting from growth in the past two quarters. One reason why the current recovery has been considerably weak: It hasnt enjoyed as strong a contribution from the housing sector as in past recoveries. Housing, which stopped being a drag on growth in 2011, added a small boost in 2012 and most of 2013. The decline that began last fall wasnt actually due to a slowdown in home construction, but instead reflected a drop in brokers real-estate commissions after sales of previously owned homes slumped.
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Revisions Redux
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The second-quarter rebound in GDP looks even better in light of the fact that the last six months of 2013 was revised up, with growth advancing at the strongest pace since 2003, according to annual revisions to economic growth published by the Commerce Department on Wednesday. GDP in the third and fourth quarters increased at an annual pace of 4.5% and 3.5%, respectively, up from earlier estimates of 4.1% and 2.6%. The estimate of a 2.9% contraction for the first quarter, meanwhile, was revised up to a 2.1% decline.
The Feds Focus
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The latest GDP figures arent likely to immediately influence Federal Reserve policy makers as they conclude their two-day meeting this afternoon. The central bank is expected to cut its monthly bond purchases by another $10 billion. But the Feds forecast of economic growth in June projected annual growth of 2.1% to 2.3%. With the latest report, growth would need to exceed 3% in the second half to stay close to that forecast. Wednesdays report also showed inflation narrowly exceeded the Feds 2% target during the quarter.
Bloomberg
The States Brighten
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Government spending turned positive in the second quarter after a sharp slowdown at the end of last year following the government shutdown. Government spending, which remained negative during the first quarter, rose 1.6% in the second quarter, and it was powered by state and local government spending, which was up 3.1% from the prior quarter, the largest such increase since 2009. State and local government spending boosted GDP by 0.35 percentage point, also a five-year high.
Unprecedented and unexpected!
With the economy fixed...King Putt is off to the links for a golf vacation.
Yesterday I stopped at a normally busy Subway for lunch. At 12:10 PM the place was empty. I chatted with the server. I was the third customer since opening a 8:00.
GDP=Gross Depression Propaganda
Comrades! Comrades! The chocolate ration has been increased!!
Where can I find the set schedule?
Bull friggin’ crap... wait for this number to revised downward to 0.3% in about a month or two.
King Putt....LOL!
No worries!!! Folks will just put it on their credit cards... 1 in 3 Americans are behind in their credit payments, average credit balances...$5,100.00...for now.
I think it fits him to a Tee ( golf tee).
I’m surprised out photoshopping FReepers haven’t made some neat ‘King Putt’ gifs with that theme.
Not just gifs....but, I see a whole line of merchandising opportunities, as well. Hurry and get this going, before someone else does - you likely won’t get a mulligan ;)
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