Second quarter looks uglier and uglier – Wall Street Journal
The first look at second-quarter gross domestic product won’t be released until July 31–the second day of the Federal Reserve‘s next Federal Open Market Committee meeting. But monthly data available make it clear the spring slump was, indeed, very very slumpy.
Monday brought disappointing news on retail sales and business
inventories. Retail purchases increased just 0.4% in June, not the 0.8%
expected, and May’s sales were revised down. The control sales group,
which goes into GDP and which excludes vehicles, building materials and
gasoline, rose 0.15% in June, half the gain forecasted.
In addition, businesses increased their inventories level by just
0.1% in May, and April’s increase was revised from 0.2% to 0.3%.
The list of economic shops now estimating real GDP grew by less than a 1% annual rate last quarter include Goldman Sachs (0.8% as of Monday), Macroeconomic Advisors (0.6%), Royal Bank of Scotland (0.5%) and Barclays (0.5%).
(One caveat to the upcoming GDP data is that the Bureau of Economic
Analysis will be releasing benchmark revisions and new methodology at
the same time the second quarter GDP data are released.)
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