The Prague Post - US second quarter GDP growth to reflect tariff turbulence

EUR -
AED 4.21916
AFN 79.834651
ALL 96.832301
AMD 440.911585
ANG 2.055803
AOA 1053.345046
ARS 1516.186851
AUD 1.777701
AWG 2.070507
AZN 1.962093
BAM 1.94763
BBD 2.320266
BDT 140.88896
BGN 1.957825
BHD 0.433012
BIF 3380.009062
BMD 1.148686
BND 1.481485
BOB 7.940757
BRL 6.438155
BSD 1.149179
BTN 100.446494
BWP 15.533969
BYN 3.760723
BYR 22514.248977
BZD 2.308336
CAD 1.585652
CDF 3319.703146
CHF 0.93021
CLF 0.028293
CLP 1110.044374
CNY 8.244003
CNH 8.275164
COP 4801.760911
CRC 580.967852
CUC 1.148686
CUP 30.440184
CVE 110.216534
CZK 24.600283
DJF 204.144892
DKK 7.462934
DOP 70.07021
DZD 150.091109
EGP 55.929616
ERN 17.230293
ETB 158.744077
FJD 2.601893
FKP 0.861191
GBP 0.864047
GEL 3.10142
GGP 0.861191
GHS 12.064945
GIP 0.861191
GMD 82.705898
GNF 9943.027199
GTQ 8.817012
GYD 240.423498
HKD 9.017146
HNL 30.267877
HRK 7.539286
HTG 150.797393
HUF 399.907088
IDR 18892.90095
ILS 3.879039
IMP 0.861191
INR 100.547936
IQD 1504.778886
IRR 48374.05176
ISK 142.206182
JEP 0.861191
JMD 183.880209
JOD 0.814403
JPY 170.867254
KES 148.754797
KGS 100.452437
KHR 4611.97497
KMF 489.917658
KPW 1033.721705
KRW 1596.28313
KWD 0.351223
KYD 0.957691
KZT 624.694795
LAK 24782.904656
LBP 102864.847039
LKR 347.183538
LRD 230.885824
LSL 20.549658
LTL 3.391771
LVL 0.694829
LYD 6.220103
MAD 10.440978
MDL 19.604926
MGA 5088.68021
MKD 61.304159
MMK 2410.980598
MNT 4124.339734
MOP 9.291922
MRU 45.740583
MUR 52.976912
MVR 17.68886
MWK 1994.690429
MXN 21.567605
MYR 4.870561
MZN 73.470337
NAD 20.550376
NGN 1758.638227
NIO 42.214523
NOK 11.777525
NPR 160.712797
NZD 1.939741
OMR 0.441701
PAB 1.149189
PEN 4.08071
PGK 4.769379
PHP 66.45611
PKR 325.365228
PLN 4.270183
PYG 8606.893414
QAR 4.182079
RON 5.073973
RSD 117.184373
RUB 93.327083
RWF 1654.108088
SAR 4.309298
SBD 9.469956
SCR 16.661079
SDG 689.787471
SEK 11.16419
SGD 1.4852
SHP 0.902687
SLE 26.420388
SLL 24087.379223
SOS 656.476894
SRD 42.12231
STD 23775.484578
STN 24.639318
SVC 10.054819
SYP 14935.159432
SZL 20.54965
THB 37.504035
TJS 10.985909
TMT 4.031888
TND 3.325432
TOP 2.690341
TRY 46.61667
TTD 7.798353
TWD 34.127672
TZS 2952.123469
UAH 47.975955
UGX 4119.806754
USD 1.148686
UYU 45.987081
UZS 14473.445406
VES 140.929147
VND 30098.449429
VUV 137.240301
WST 3.16706
XAF 653.222368
XAG 0.030584
XAU 0.000348
XCD 3.104381
XCG 2.071012
XDR 0.79651
XOF 653.216705
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.431398
ZAR 20.601204
ZMK 10339.550768
ZMW 26.401474
ZWL 369.876479
  • RYCEF

    -0.1800

    13.2

    -1.36%

  • CMSC

    -0.0630

    22.547

    -0.28%

  • BCC

    -1.4850

    84.655

    -1.75%

  • BTI

    0.4850

    53.255

    +0.91%

  • SCS

    -0.1150

    10.395

    -1.11%

  • RBGPF

    -3.5200

    74.03

    -4.75%

  • RELX

    -0.2600

    51.66

    -0.5%

  • SCU

    0.0000

    12.72

    0%

  • GSK

    1.2000

    38.87

    +3.09%

  • NGG

    -0.1900

    70.33

    -0.27%

  • RIO

    -2.7750

    59.495

    -4.66%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    13.15

    +0.68%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    11.08

    -0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.2150

    23.445

    -0.92%

  • CMSD

    -0.1800

    22.94

    -0.78%

  • BP

    -0.8750

    32.085

    -2.73%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    76.64

    +3.47%

US second quarter GDP growth to reflect tariff turbulence
US second quarter GDP growth to reflect tariff turbulence / Photo: Guillermo Arias - AFP/File

US second quarter GDP growth to reflect tariff turbulence

US economic growth is expected to rebound in the second quarter, analysts said, in a momentary comeback reflecting trade shifts as companies tried to avoid the harshest of President Donald Trump's wide-ranging tariffs.

Text size:

The world's biggest economy is anticipated to expand at an annual rate of 2.5 percent in the April to June period, according to a consensus forecast by Briefing.com.

This marks a reversal of a 0.5 percent decline, annualized, seen in the first three months of the year.

But cost pressures from tariffs, among other factors, could later bog down investment and consumption -– a key driver of the US economy.

"It's very much distorted by the trade flows and inventory," said Nationwide chief economist Kathy Bostjancic, referring to second quarter growth.

At the start of the year, businesses rushed to stock up on products in an effort to avoid Trump's threatened tariff hikes -- but this build-up is now unwinding.

The imports surge ahead of tariff hikes in the first quarter led to the largest drag on GDP growth from net exports on record, analysts at Goldman Sachs said in a recent note.

This means a bounce back is expected once imports cool.

But the acceleration is not sustainable, Bostjancic told AFP.

Trump had raised the idea of across-the-board tariffs targeting trading partners during election campaigning last year, and since returning to the US presidency in January he has rolled out wave after wave of fresh duties.

These included a 10 percent levy on almost all US partners, higher duties on steel, aluminum and auto imports, as well as separate actions against Canada and Mexico over illegal immigration and illicit fentanyl flows.

In April, the Trump administration separately took aim at the world's number two economy, China, as Beijing pushed back on US tariffs.

Both countries ended up imposing tit-for-tat tariffs on each other's products, reaching triple-digit levels and bringing many trade flows to a halt before Washington and Beijing reached a temporary agreement to lower duties.

After two days of talks in the Swedish capital of Stockholm this week, negotiators from both countries signaled there could be an extension of the truce -- although the final call depends on Trump.

- 'Clear deceleration' -

Bostjancic expects that underlying activity driving US gross domestic product will be moderating, although not collapsing.

"The US economy continues to navigate a complex set of crosscurrents, obscuring a clear reading of its underlying momentum," said EY chief economist Gregory Daco in a note.

But he added that one trend is evident, which is that "economic activity is decelerating even as inflationary pressures are reemerging."

"Tariff-induced cost pressures, persistent policy uncertainty, severely curtailed immigration, and elevated interest rates are collectively dampening employment, business investment and household consumption," Daco said.

Analysts are closely eyeing the impact of Trump's tariffs on inflation, with economists warning that the duties could fuel price increases. They expect to learn more from data in the summer months.

All of this could impact consumer spending -- a key economic driver.

"The trend in GDP growth is best analyzed by considering the first and second quarters together," said Samuel Tombs, chief US economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics.

"The likely average growth rate of about 1.5 percent over these two quarters represents a clear deceleration from the 3 percent rates in the previous two years," he added.

He said in a note that the US economy would probably "lose more momentum" in the third quarter, when consumer prices for imported goods likely will rise sharply.

And "adverse consequences" of economic policy uncertainty will also start to materialize when it comes to business investment, Tombs said.

Analysts have noted that companies tend to hold off major decisions during times of uncertainty, given the risk of sudden policy shifts.

"We continue to expect GDP growth to average just 1 percent in the second half of this year," Tombs said.

H.Vesely--TPP