Goldman slashes GDP forecast for the second quarter to just barely above water

Goldman slashes GDP forecast for the second quarter to just barely above water


A Goldman Sachs Group Inc. logo hangs on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York, U.S., on Wednesday, May 19, 2010.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Amid heightened concerns that a recession is looming, Goldman Sachs economists expect that the U.S. economy barely grew in the second quarter.

The Wall Street firm’s forecasters on Thursday sliced their outlook for gross domestic product in the April-to-June period, now expecting an annualized gain of just 0.7%, down from the previous expectation of a 1.9% increase.

Combined with the decline of 1.6% in the second quarter, that would bring the first half to within a whisker of a recession, which is generally defined as two straight quarterly declines.

Goldman’s adjustment follows a report Thursday morning showing that the U.S. trade deficit declined in May to $85.5 billion, the lowest level of 2022 but ahead of the Dow Jones estimate for $84.7 billion. The number was influenced by a $2.8 billion decrease in the shortfall with China, as the nation grappled with lockdowns brought on by a Covid surge.

“The details of the May trade report were weaker than our previous assumptions, and we now expect real goods imports to remain elevated through June,” Goldman said in a client note.

The adjustment comes amid a darkening outlook for the economy and some expectations that a shallow recession may even have arrived already.

In a related adjustment, the Atlanta Federal Reserve updated its GDPNow tracker Thursday morning to show an expected Q2 decline of 1.9%. That, however, was a slight upgrade from July 1, when the gauge pointed to a 2.1% drop.

Fed officials have expressed optimism that the economy can skirt a recession despite tighter policy aimed at controlling runaway inflation. The central bank has raised benchmark borrowing rates by 1.5 percentage points this year and expects to keep going to a “restrictive” rate aimed at pulling back growth.

Wells Fargo economists said they expect the more aggressive Fed policy to step up the timeline for a “moderate” recession that they see beginning soon and lasting into mid-2023.

“Our outlook through 2023 has evolved based on how strong labor market and abundant cash supports are eroding under persistent inflation and [the Fed’s] increasingly aggressive policy response,” the firm wrote. “Whether inflation peaks this summer or autumn matters less to our view than inflation’s staying power, no matter when it peaks. The erosion is quickening and the path to recession appears to have sharpened its trajectory for the U.S. and, a little later, for the eurozone.”

New Wells Fargo forecasts see GDP falling 0.2% in 2022 and rising 0.9% in 2023. The previous respective forecasts were for a gain of 1.5% and a decline of 0.5%.



Source

Coco Gauff handles bad memories and top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka to earn first French Open title
World

Coco Gauff handles bad memories and top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka to earn first French Open title

Drawing on the painful memory of her defeat three years ago in the French Open final gave Coco Gauff just the motivation she needed to win the clay-court major for the first time. The 21-year-old American defeated top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-4 on Saturday for her second Grand Slam title, two years after […]

Read More
Longevity doctor: ‘Every single day I try to get at least 30 to 40 grams of fiber in my diet’—here’s how
World

Longevity doctor: ‘Every single day I try to get at least 30 to 40 grams of fiber in my diet’—here’s how

Poonam Desai is an ER doctor with two decades of experience who studied and recommended daily practices for a long life to her patients well before it became her main focus.  In 2017, she officially started practicing longevity medicine, teaching patients the tools they need to structure their routines with living long and staying healthy in […]

Read More
I’ve spent 10 years studying parents of highly successful kids—5 things they do differently: ‘It’s not just hard work and grit’
World

I’ve spent 10 years studying parents of highly successful kids—5 things they do differently: ‘It’s not just hard work and grit’

I’ve always been fascinated by families whose children seem to be on some kind of unusual streak, reaching the top of their career ladders, or, even more interesting to me, blazing trails or following their passions with spectacular results. What did their parents do differently to empower them? What do researchers really know about what’s […]

Read More