Earnings: Less Bad This Time Around

 | Aug 01, 2016 06:10AM ET

On Friday, the BEA released the first estimate of 2Q GDP, which was a disappointing 1.2%. However, the report’s internals numbers were mixed. Consumer spending strongly increased, rising 4.2%. Durable goods spending was up a very solid 8.2%, while spending on non-durable goods and services also advanced (up 6% and 3%, respectively). However, business investment was very weak: gross private domestic investment dropped a whopping 9.7%; 3 of 4 sub-categories declined (non-residential structures -7.9%, equipment -3.5%, residential investment -6.1%). Finally, the BEA also revised 1Q GDP growth down, this time to .8%.

There are several ways to look at the GDP data.The simplest and most negative is that the U.S. economy is slumping and potentially heading towards a recession. This is the easiest to digest because it relies exclusively on the headline number.

But there are several counter-arguments, the simplest of which is that final sale of domestic product increased a fairly healthy 2.4%, signaling that domestic demand is strong. The second counter-argument is more nuanced: there are pockets of weakness (corporate profits and hence business investment) but also areas of strength (the low unemployment rate is increasing consumer confidence and, as a result, consumer spending). Further complicating the picture is the BEA has had difficulty measuring 1Q GDP for the last few years. San Francisco Fed President made the following statement in a speech on May 13:

Although the published data should account for usual seasonal patterns, for myriad wonky reasons that would take too much time—and too much of your patience—to explain, they don’t. To correct for this problem, my staff has added a second round of adjustment to get a more accurate number. Adjusted in this way, real GDP actually grew over 2 percent in the first quarter. This makes more sense when we look at the rest of the economy—such as the labor market—and is in line with what I’m hearing from the business community, that they didn’t see significant drop-offs at the beginning of the year.

Applying Occam’s razor, the right answer is the U.S. economy is slowing. And while we’re not in a recession, we’re getting uncomfortably close. However, the more nuanced answer offers a great deal of insight, complicating the simplistic reliance on the reported number.

The housing market continues to provide positive economic news. New home sales increased 3.5% M/M and 25.4% Y/Y. This data started to increase in September 2015 rising from ~457,000 to its just reported level of 592,000, a post-recession high: