Has the Fed Engineered a Soft Landing?

 | Jul 31, 2023 17:19

The macroeconomic narrative shifts from recession to a soft landing.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released the quarterly gross domestic product (GDP) data on Thursday. Although subject to further revision in August, the Q2 GDP data shows a 2.4% annual growth, an uptick from Q1’s 2.0% economic growth.

The fact that GDP significantly beat the estimated 1.8% lends credence to the emerging ‘soft landing’ narrative. For over a year, economists had expected recession (hard landing) to follow the most aggressive interest rate hiking cycle in over 40 years.

h2 Contradictory Macro Signals/h2

As the Federal Reserve suppressed asset valuation by making borrowing expensive, there has been no shortage of recessionary signals, from sharp tech layoffs to heavy banking failures.

Surprisingly positive GDP growth follows an equally upbeat inflation downturn in June, beating the estimated 3.1% at 3.0% Consumer Price Index (CPI). Likewise, fresh data shows core Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) dropping to 4.1%, the lowest in two years.

Based on these macro tailwinds, on Wednesday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell stated that his team of experts is “no longer forecasting a recession.” But is the GDP growth indicative of an actual soft landing?

h2 The Origin of the Positive GDP Growth/h2

Although not strictly determined by two consecutive quarters of negative GDP growth, it plays a big part in whether the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) will declare recession as such.

Other factors include real consumer spending, employment rate, and real personal income. The latest BEA data show mixed signals. As subtracted from taxes and other mandatory payments and adjusted for inflation, real disposable personal income increased by 2.5%, compared to an 8.5% increase in the previous quarter.

On the other hand, the personal savings rate, as a percentage of disposable income, increased slightly at 4.4% in Q2 compared to 4.3% in Q1. The big metric is consumer spending, accounting for over two-thirds of the US economy. The Commerce Department reported a significant uptick in consumer spending in June, at 0.4% adjusted for inflation, compared to 0.2% in May.

Aside from consumer spending, GDP increase comes from nonresidential fixed investments, private inventory investments, and an increase in federal government spending.

h2 Economic Activity Still Running on Debt Fumes/h2

As a countervailing ‘soft landing’ narrative, BEA reported imports and exports decreasing as of July 6th. Year-over-year, from May 2022, average imports decreased by $22.6 billion, while average exports increased by only $0.3 billion, signaling a weaker economy.