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US GDP for Q4 (2nd revision) 0.7% vs 1.4% estimate and prior

Prior estimate 1.4%GDP 2nd estimate 0.7% versus 1.4% preliminary. This is well below the expectations going into the 1st cut of the GDP (was expecting 3.0%).GDP Deflator 3.8% vs 3.6% est. and 3.7% preliminary Core PCE 2.7% versus 2.7% estimate and 2.7% preliminary GDP sales preliminary 0.4% versus 1.2% preliminary.Consumer spending 2.0% versus 2.4% preliminaryPCE price is preliminary 2.9% versus 2.9% preliminaryPCE X food, energy, and housing 2.8% versus 2.8% preliminary PCE services excluding energy and housing 3.6% versus 3.6% preliminaryOf note, the initial estimate for GDP growth was 3.0%, but subsequent revisions showed weaker underlying components. Government spending was reduced due to the effects of the government shutdown, contributing to the downward revision. Net exports were also revised lower, with exports accounting for the largest portion of that decline. In addition, both investment and consumer spending were adjusted lower compared to the first estimate, signaling softer demand than initially reported.Real final sales to private domestic purchasers—a key measure of underlying demand combining consumer spending and private fixed investment—rose 1.9% in Q4, revised down from the prior estimate by 0.5 percentage point.Inflation measures were little changed. The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 3.8%, revised up slightly by 0.1 percentage point. The PCE price index rose 2.9%, unchanged from the previous estimate, while core PCE (excluding food and energy) increased 2.7%, also unchanged from the prior estimate.Details from the BEAReal GDP increased at an annual rate of 0.7 percent (0.2 percent at a quarterly rate 1) in the fourth quarter, a downward revision of 0.7 percentage point from the previous estimate, reflecting downward revisions to exports, consumer spending, government spending, and investment.The downward revision to exports reflected a downward revision to services (led by charges for the use of intellectual property), reflecting updated data from BEA’s International Transactions Accounts.The downward revision to consumer spending reflected a downward revision to services that was partly offset by an upward revision to goods. Within services, the largest contributor to the downward revision was health care (both hospital and nursing home services as well as outpatient services), based on new fourth-quarter data from the U.S. Census Bureau Quarterly Services Survey (QSS). Within goods, the upward revisions were widespread, based on revised U.S. Census Bureau Monthly Retail Trade Survey data for November and December.Within government, the revision primarily reflected a downward revision to state and local government structures investment, based on revised October and new November and December U.S. Census Bureau Value of Construction Put in Place (VPIP) data.Within investment, the revision reflected downward revisions to structures and intellectual property products. The revision to structures was led by manufacturing structures, based on revised October and new November and December U.S. Census Bureau VPIP data. The revision to intellectual property products primarily reflected a downward revision to software, based on new U.S Census Bureau QSS data.Impact of the Shutdown from the BEAThe partial federal government shutdown from October 1 to November 12, 2025 weighed on Q4 growth. While the full impact cannot be precisely measured because it is embedded in broader data, the BEA estimates that reduced labor services from furloughed federal workers lowered real GDP growth by about 1.0 percentage point in the fourth quarter.Because furloughed employees ultimately received back pay, the shutdown did not affect current-dollar federal compensation, but it temporarily raised the measured price of federal employee compensation.For 2025Real GDP grew 2.1% in 2025, revised down slightly by 0.1 percentage point from the prior estimate, with growth primarily driven by increases in consumer spending and investment.On the inflation side, the price index for gross domestic purchases rose 2.6%, unchanged from the previous estimate. The PCE price index also increased 2.6%, while core PCE (excluding food and energy) rose 2.8%, both unchanged from earlier estimates.Looking ahead to 2026The Q1 estimate for GDP from the Atlanta Fed GDP model estimates Q1 growth at 2.7% given released data. Having said that, the model estimated Q4 growth at 3.0% going into the 1st estimate. When it came in at 1.4% it showed a crack from prior model estimates. That may have been skewed by the government shutdown. Will the bounce back be greater than estimated in Q1? What will the war impact (higher energy costs) flow through? Time will tell, but data will be more volatile.For the BEA release, CLICK HERE
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.

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💡 DMK Insight

The GDP revision to 0.7% is a wake-up call for traders: economic growth is stalling. With expectations initially set at 3.0%, this sharp decline signals potential weakness in consumer spending and overall economic activity. The GDP deflator at 3.8% also suggests inflationary pressures are still present, complicating the Fed’s path forward. For day traders and swing traders, this could mean increased volatility in equities and possibly a flight to safety in bonds or gold. Watch for how the market reacts to these numbers, especially in sectors sensitive to consumer spending like retail and discretionary goods. If the market starts pricing in a more dovish Fed, we might see shifts in interest rate expectations, impacting forex pairs like USD/JPY or EUR/USD. Here’s the flip side: if the market overreacts to this data, it could create buying opportunities in oversold sectors. Keep an eye on key technical levels in major indices; a break below recent support could trigger further selling pressure. The next few trading sessions will be crucial as investors digest this information and adjust their positions accordingly.

📮 Takeaway

Monitor the reaction in equities and forex markets; a break below key support levels could signal further downside risk.

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