by Invesco
U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) output grew by only 0.7% annualized between January and March, we believe the underlying details of the data were supportive of stronger growth in the coming quarters…
As shown in the chart below, consumption was the big disappointment, expanding by only 0.3%, versus averaging around 1.6% growth since 2009. However, we believe that:
suggest that consumption is likely to bounce back.
Also, initial GDP releases have tended to misread consumption…so it’s possible we may get a positive upward revision.
Consumption’s contribution to growth disappointed in the first quarter
Source: Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED), quarter-over-quarter, annualized, Oct. 1, 2009 – Jan. 1, 2017
Investment activity could bolster future growth
While the initial consumption figures were a detractor, the first-quarter expansion in investment activity was encouraging.
If investment and consumption stabilize at the levels we expect, we believe trend GDP growth will likely end up in the mid-to-high 2% range this year.
Invesco Fixed Income believes:
(This post is an edited excerpt of the by Invesco
.)
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