Consensus | Consensus Range | Actual | Previous | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Quarter over Quarter - Annual Rate | 2.0% | 1.2% to 2.5% | 2.8% | 1.4% |
Personal Consumption Expenditures - Annual Rate | 1.9% | 1.6% to 2.2% | 2.3% | 1.5% |
Highlights
The above-expectations performance in the second quarter adds to a picture of the US economy continuing to grow modestly despite restrictive monetary policy. The FOMC will take this into account. It won't bring forward the timing of a possible rate cut at the July 30-31 meeting, but neither should it encourage the FOMC to remain on hold at the September 17-18 meeting.
The second quarter's increase was powered by a 2.3 percent rise in personal consumption expenditures with spending on durable goods up 4.7 percent, nondurables up 1.4 percent, and services up 2.2 percent. Government consumption expenditures rose 3.1 percent in the second quarter.
Personal consumption overall was the largest contribution to GDP (1.57 percentage points) while the second largest was gross investment (1.46).
Gross investment gained 8.4 percent in the second quarter with fixed investment up 3.6 percent. Within fixed investment, weakness in residential investment shows a 1.4 percent decline, while nonresidential investment was up 5.2 percent.
The change in private inventories made a positive contribution (0.82), rising to $92.9 billion in the second quarter from $36.0 billion in the first quarter. Net exports made the only negative contribution among major components (minus 0.72) with the deficit widening to $894.4 billion from $834.9 in the prior quarter.
The quarterly price index for personal consumption rose 2.6 percent in the second quarter, down sharply from up 3.4 in the first quarter. The core price index for personal consumption increased 2.9 percent in the second quarter after up 3.7 percent in the prior quarter. These results offer more evidence that the process of disinflation has resumed.
Market Consensus Before Announcement
Definition
Household purchases are counted in personal consumption expenditures -- durable goods (such as furniture and cars), nondurable goods (such as clothing and food) and services (such as banking, education and transportation). Private housing purchases are classified as residential investment. Businesses invest in nonresidential structures, durable equipment and computer software. Inventories at all stages of production are counted as investment. Only inventory changes, not levels, are added to GDP.
Net exports equal the sum of exports less imports. Exports are the purchases by foreigners of goods and services produced in the United States. Imports represent domestic purchases of foreign-produced goods and services and must be deducted from the calculation of GDP. Government purchases of goods and services are the compensation of government employees and purchases from businesses and abroad. Data show the portion attributed to consumption and investment. Government outlays for transfer payments or interest payments are not included in GDP.
The GDP price index is a comprehensive indicator of inflation. It is typically lower than the consumer price index because investment goods (which are in the GDP price index but not the CPI) tend to have lower rates of inflation than consumer goods and services. Note that contributions of each component, as averaged over the prior year, are tracked in the table below (components do not exactly sum to total due to chain-weighted methodology). Consumption expenditures, otherwise known as consumer spending, has over history been steadily making up an increasing share of GDP.
Description
The GDP report contains a treasure-trove of information which not only paints an image of the overall economy, but tells investors about important trends within the big picture. GDP components such as consumer spending, business and residential investment, and price (inflation) indexes illuminate the economy's undercurrents, which can translate to investment opportunities and guidance in managing a portfolio.
Importance
Gross domestic product is the country's most comprehensive economic scorecard.
Interpretation
When gross domestic product expands more (less) rapidly that its potential, bond prices fall (rise). Healthy GDP growth usually translates into strong corporate earnings, which bode well for the stock market.
The four major categories of GDP -- personal consumption expenditures, investment, net exports and government -- all reveal important information about the economy and should be monitored separately. One can thus determine the strengths and weaknesses of the economy in order to assess alternatives and make appropriate financial investment decisions.
Economists and financial market participants monitor final sales -- GDP less the change in business inventories. When final sales are growing faster than inventories, this points to increases in production in months ahead. Conversely, when final sales are growing more slowly than inventories, they signal a slowdown in production.
It is useful to distinguish between private demand versus growth in government expenditures. Market players discount growth in the government sector because it depends on fiscal policy rather than economic conditions.
Market participants view increased expenditures on investment favorably because they expand the productive capacity of the country. This means that we can produce more without inciting inflationary pressures.
Net exports are a drag on total GDP because the United States regularly imports more than it exports, that is, net exports are in deficit. When the net export deficit becomes less negative, it adds to growth because a smaller amount is subtracted from GDP. When the deficit widens, it subtracts even more from GDP.
Gross domestic product is subject to some quarterly volatility, so it is appropriate to follow year-over-year percent changes, to smooth out this variation.