Is the US economy really growing at 5.8%? Not so fast.

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While the GDP model now reflects strength in July data for retail sales, auto sales, housing starts and industrial production, Skordeles says most of this resilience was more a “one-off” than a reflection of a permanent trend. The expected strength in the July reports also got a boost from the double counting of some items, notably the auto and residential construction data that appear in many of the agency’s reports.

While new home construction was strong in July, new building permits — generally seen as a leading indicator — are not currently factored into the GDP estimate now, Skordellis notes. Permits ran 13% below 2022 levels. Moreover, housing data for July does not reflect the mortgage-related fallout from the latest rate hike. Average 30-year mortgage rates rose to record highs last week. Given these factors, Skordeles says, housing in general looks weaker as we approach the end of the year.

“The economy is definitely slowing,” Skordilis says, adding that while he doesn’t expect a sudden collapse in economic activity, he hasn’t given up on his prediction that the United States will experience a shallow recession.

economic Jason Foreman notes In a post on X, formerly Twitter, that at this point in any given quarter, GDPNow model forecasts typically bias upwards by about one percentage point. Excluding the 2020 estimates, he wrote, the projections at this point have a standard deviation of about 1.5 percentage points.

The biggest error in the model, excluding 2020, was on August 17, 2021. The GDP estimate was now 6.2%, and the government’s advance estimate of GDP came in at 2.0%, Furman said.

Markets seem to have ignored the latest GDP estimates for now. On Friday, odds of the Fed keeping the federal funds rate unchanged in September were at 90.5%, According to CME FedWatch, which tracks movements in interest rate futures contracts. That was slightly higher than Wednesday’s reading.

So, yeah, be patient. What the current GDP estimate suggests to investors and the markets is that the US economy is nowhere near recession. But there are still 43 days left in the third quarter, and many important economic reports have yet to be released. By mid-September, the view from Atlanta may look different.

Write to Megan Leonhardt at megan.leonhardt@barrons.com

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