The Top Of GDP And Reading Its Signs Of Market Erosion

 | Jul 25, 2018 12:38AM ET

In 1999, real GDP growth in the United States was 4.69% (Q4 over Q4). In 1998, it was 4.9989%. These were annual not quarterly rates, meaning that for two years straight GDP expanded by better than 4.5%. Individual quarters within those years obviously varied, but at the end of the day the economy was clearly booming.

It also helped that these particular two years followed two good ones before them. GDP growth in 1997 was 4.39% and 4.45% in 1996.

This week the US Bureau of Economic Analysis will report real GDP growth for Q2 2018. After another disappointing start to the year, just less than 2% in Q1, in all likelihood growth picked up last quarter. We don’t know by how much just yet, some are calling for around 3% while others, such as those in the White House, think it will be 5%.

Either way, we’ve seen this all before. It will be called a boom even though the pattern remains less than that of 2014 and nothing at all like 1998 and 1999. People should pay much closer attention to 2014 than continue to dream of the dot-com era that is in no way attainable under current conditions.

For those whose memories are transitory, there was not one but two quarters where real GDP growth pushed beyond 4.5% the last time around. In Q3 2014, it was better than 5% (though revised differently over the years). And also like now, those two booming quarters occurred while underneath negative pressures had already started to erode what little momentum there was during them.

Booming quarters clearly don’t make a boom. Despite those two, GDP growth for 2014 overall was a chilly 2.69%. The only thing that is ever transitory is these good numbers.

This time is different, they’ll say. Tax cuts and global synchronicity make it different. They said similar enough things last time, too. Only then it was QE3, European “stimulus”, and global growth with China leading. China did lead, of course, just in the wrong direction.

Like sentiment surveys , contrary to pre-crisis patterns these “good” quarters have tended to mark the top in each mini-cycle rather than the start of an economy becoming meaningfully better off; the end of each small upswing rather than the beginning of necessary but long absent big acceleration. They say no one rings the bell at the top, but 4.5% GDP has so far been a pretty good sign of just that.

If there was 5.08% in Q3 2014 right on the cusp of the nasty parts of the “rising dollar”, there was also Q4 2011 in the teeth of the 2011 crisis. GDP in that particular quarter? A booming 4.48%.