| Actual | Previous | |
|---|---|---|
| Quarter over Quarter | -0.8% | 0.5% |
| Year over Year | 3.8% | 5.0% |
Highlights
Weaker headline quarter-over-quarter GDP growth in the three months to March was broad-based. Manufacturing sector sector output fell 4.9 percent on the quarter after no change previously, in line with previously published data showing weak export growth at the start of the year. Construction activity also weakened sharply, falling 2.3 percent on the quarter after a previous increase of 0.3 percent, while service sector output rose 0.3 percent on the quarter after advancing 0.9 percent previously.
Also today, officials at the Monetary Authority of Singapore adjusted policy settings at their quarterly policy review, announcing they will target a slightly reduced pace of appreciation. Officials expressed concerns that trade tensions will weigh on external demand and that weakness could"spill over into the domestic-oriented sectors", forecasting GDP to grow between zero percent and two percent this year, down from 4.4 percent in 2024.
Definition
In order to compare the real value of output/expenditure over time, it is necessary to remove the effect of price changes. This is achieved by selecting the price structure of 2010 as the base according to which the goods and services in other years are re-valued. The resulting aggregates after adjustment for price changes are known as constant-price estimates.
The advance GDP estimates are computed largely from data in the first two months of the quarter (e.g. 1st Quarter is based on Jan and Feb; 2nd Quarter is based on Apr and May). They are intended as early estimates of GDP growth in the quarter, and are subject to revision when more comprehensive data become available.
Description
Each financial market reacts differently to GDP data because of their focus. For example, equity market participants cheer healthy economic growth because it improves the corporate profit outlook while weak growth generally means anemic earnings. Equities generally drop on disappointing growth and climb on good growth prospects.
Bond or fixed income markets are contrarians. They prefer weak growth so that there is less of a chance of higher central bank interest rates and inflation. When GDP growth is poor or negative it indicates anemic or negative economic activity. Bond prices will rise and interest rates will fall. When growth is positive and good, interest rates will be higher and bond prices lower.