Accentuate The Positive: The Psychological Inflation Of Quarterly GDP

 | Jan 30, 2015 12:34AM ET

Pop Quiz! You just received your quarterly statement from the company that manages your 401(k). Which result would you prefer?

A) Your portfolio is up 1.22% for the quarter.
B) Your portfolio is up 4.97%* for the quarter.

Well, that's certainly a no-brainer question. You'd definitely choose option B.

However, buried in the fine print of the document for option B is the footnote for that little asterisk:

*Compounded Annual Percent Change

So this was a trick quiz question! The two answers are identical. To two decimal places, the quarter-over-quarter gain of 1.22% becomes 4.97% if we state it as the compounded annual percent change.

Of course, in the real world, no investment company would issue a 401(k), IRA or any other account statement reporting your quarterly returns at a compounded annual rate.

But that's exactly the way the US Department of Commerce, via the Bureau of Economic Analysis, reports quarterly GDP. Here is the opening of the December 23, 2014 report for Third Quarter GDP:

Real gross domestic product -- the value of the production of goods and services in the United States, adjusted for price changes -- increased at an annual rate of 5.0 percent in the third quarter of 2014....

The 5.0 percent was actually 4.97% (answer B in our quiz question) rounded to one decimal. The quarter-over-quarter change was 1.22% (answer A).

Here's a snapshot of real quarterly GDP over the past 25 years.