Skip to main content
UK - Financial Adviser
Select Region Select User Type
  • Global
    • Home
  • UK Investors
    • Financial Adviser
    • Private Investor
  • International Investors
    • Private Investor
    • Professional Investor
  • Fund Centre
    • Our Funds
      • Equities
        • Rathbone Global Opportunities Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainability Fund
        • Rathbone Income Fund Fund
        • Rathbone UK Opportunities Fund
      • Fixed Income
        • Rathbone Ethical bond Fund
        • Rathbone High Quality Bond Fund
        • Rathbone Strategic Bond Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainable Bond Fund
      • Multi-Asset
        • Rathbone Greenbank Multi-Asset Portfolios
        • Rathbone MULTI-ASSET PORTFOLIOS
      • Sustainable
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainable Bond Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainability Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Multi-Asset Portfolios
    • Literature Library
    • Consumer Duty
    • Prices and Performance
    • Glossary of Terms and FAQs
  • Strategies
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Multi-Asset
    • Sustainable
  • Our Clients
    • Private Investor
    • Financial Adviser
    • International Private Investor
    • International Financial Adviser
  • Rathbones
  • Global Home
  • Insights
    • Fund Insights
    • In the know blog
    • Review of the week
    • The Sharpe End podcast
  • About us
    • About us
    • Our People
    • Awards
    • Media centre
    • Responsible Investing at Rathbones
  • Contact
Home Home

Search

  • Fund Centre
    • Our Funds
      • Equities
        • Rathbone Global Opportunities Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainability Fund
        • Rathbone Income Fund Fund
        • Rathbone UK Opportunities Fund
      • Fixed Income
        • Rathbone Ethical bond Fund
        • Rathbone High Quality Bond Fund
        • Rathbone Strategic Bond Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainable Bond Fund
      • Multi-Asset
        • Rathbone Greenbank Multi-Asset Portfolios
        • Rathbone MULTI-ASSET PORTFOLIOS
      • Sustainable
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainable Bond Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Global Sustainability Fund
        • Rathbone Greenbank Multi-Asset Portfolios
    • Literature Library
    • Consumer Duty
    • Prices and Performance
    • Glossary of Terms and FAQs
  • Strategies
    • Equities
    • Fixed Income
    • Multi-Asset
    • Sustainable
  • Our Clients
    • Private Investor
    • Financial Adviser
    • International Private Investor
    • International Financial Adviser
  • Rathbones
  • Global Home
  • Insights
    • Fund Insights
    • In the know blog
    • Review of the week
    • The Sharpe End podcast
  • About us
    • About us
    • Our People
    • Awards
    • Media centre
    • Responsible Investing at Rathbones
  • Contact
Home

Search

Review of the week: Taking stock of GDP

The great uncertainty over whether and when US interest rates will fall took a twist with first-quarter GDP. Much slower growth, offsetting dynamics and higher inflation are creating a puzzle.

29 April 2024

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Knowledge and Insight
  3. Review of the week: Taking stock of GDP

Article last updated 4 June 2024.

Quick take:


- US GDP growth was 1.6% in Q1, lower than expected and down from 3.4% in Q4 
- Much of the slowdown was driven by unpredictable short-term changes in trade and business inventories  
- As US interest rate cuts are pushed further into the future, other countries are feeling the strain 
 

Headline US economic growth was much slower than expected in the first quarter, yet that obscures a complex picture that makes a tough job even tougher for the world’s most powerful central bank.  

The first estimate of Q1 GDP showed growth slowed sharply from 3.4% in Q4 to 1.6% – its slowest pace in two years. Forecasters had expected a softer slowdown to 2.4%. It’s not a simple report, however. Digging beneath the surface reveals offsetting forces that will make it hard for the US Federal Reserve (Fed) to plan a path for interest rates that isn’t cloaked in uncertainty. Sort of business as usual then …

The main drivers of America’s economy in Q1 were household spending, which made up 1.7 percentage points (ppts) of GDP growth, and private fixed investment (businesses and home improvements), which delivered 0.9ppt. Government spending added a further 0.2ppt. Adding these up, we get 2.8%, so what happened out there to leave GDP growth at roughly half that? GDP was reduced by two volatile areas of the economy: trade and inventories.  

Taking inventories first, this is the stock of unsold goods on the racks in shops and warehouses. Business investment, which boosts GDP, can be ‘fixed investment’, i.e. building a new factory, or shelling out on a new fleet of trucks, or it can be ‘inventory’: simply buying more stock to sell in the future. When inventory buying accelerates, it boosts GDP; when it decelerates, it reduces GDP. In the first quarter, the slowdown in inventory orders reduced headline growth by 0.35%.  

Trade is the difference between a country’s exports and imports. When a nation exports more than it buys from abroad, then trade increases GDP; when it imports more than it sells abroad, trade decreases GDP. In the first quarter, exports were very low and imports were relatively high. Because of this, trade reduced GDP by 0.9%. In Q4, trade boosted growth by 0.3%.

Trade and inventories often jump around and can be, as economists say, ‘noisy’. When both are going the same way they can make quite a difference to headline GDP for what could be spurious reasons. Households and businesses still seem to be in good shape, are spending, and the jobs market has few signs of worrisome cracks. Also, it should always be remembered that this is the first look at data still flowing into government statisticians. Two revisions will be made of this analysis and they often move significantly. Last year’s Q1 GDP doubled to 2.2% by the time the revisions were over.

One noticeable improvement was in housing investment. Money spent on renovations and building new homes in Q1 rose 14%. Most people expected high interest rates to put a dampener on the housing market as higher mortgage rates squeezed prospective buyers and discourage those with below-market interest rates from selling. This hasn’t really happened though. Perhaps large increases in rent make building homes profitable regardless of heavier financing costs? According to US government statisticians, the average rent is roughly a fifth higher than before the pandemic and rising at a 5% annual pace so far this year. More homes would help keep rent in check and maybe even drive it down, which would help inflation more broadly. Good news if so, but it will take time.

For now, inflation continues to tick higher. The Fed’s favoured measure, PCE inflation, rose to 2.7% in March. Although it was largely lifted by higher fuel prices, core PCE (which removes volatile energy and food prices) didn’t budge at 2.7%, well above the central bank’s target.

Bond markets sold off in response to all this, as investors became yet more pessimistic about just how much the Fed will cut interest rates this year (although they fell back as the week closed out).  The first 25-basis-point US interest rate cut isn’t expected until December. When interest rates are expected to stay higher for longer, bond yields (which rise when their prices fall) increase as well.  

 

Index 

1 week 

3 months 

6 months 

1 year 

FTSE All-Share 

3.0% 

7.3% 

13.9% 

7.8% 

FTSE 100 

3.2% 

8.1% 

12.9% 

7.9% 

FTSE 250 

2.4% 

3.5% 

20.1% 

6.9% 

FTSE SmallCap 

2.5% 

3.6% 

16.4% 

9.4% 

S&P 500 

2.5% 

6.8% 

20.9% 

27.8% 

Euro Stoxx 

2.1% 

7.9% 

21.1% 

11.9% 

Topix 

0.3% 

4.4% 

13.7% 

15.2% 

Shanghai SE 

0.5% 

7.4% 

1.6% 

-9.6% 

FTSE Emerging  

3.5% 

8.5% 

12.4% 

12.0% 

 

Source: EIKON, data sterling total return to 26 April

 

These figures refer to past performance, which isn’t a reliable indicator of future returns. The value of investments and the income from them may go down as well as up and you may not get back what you originally invested.

 

Exporting inflation 

The Fed will have plenty to ponder when the interest-rate-setting committee meets on Tuesday and Wednesday. Slowing growth and increasing inflation is never a pretty picture for central bankers. They are expected once again to do nothing. Yet Chair Jay Powell does have to say something – and that will be hard!  

In the past, Powell has made his share of loose comments that have sent bond yields plummeting or soaring. He will probably want to avoid adding raucous bond yield moves to the current uncertainty. Yet many investors are forever hearing what they want to hear, misunderstanding and occasionally simply not listening. We all know how easy it is to be misunderstood.

Not only that, but the differences in the economic situation between the US and most other nations are causing their own headaches. We noted last week that strong American households and businesses are making the dollar rise considerably. This can push up inflation in other countries, especially those that use a lot of imported goods. Japan is definitely in that camp. Japan has been very slow to start increasing its interest rate (which remains at virtually zero). This is so out of kilter with global interest rates that it’s driving the yen downward fast.  

The Bank of Japan (BoJ) kept its rate at 0.1% last week and gave no indication that more hikes would come soon. The yen slumped 6% in a day, hitting a 34-year low against the dollar. The BoJ has kept its rate so low for so long because it is trying to boost its long-time-anaemic economy and ensure that inflation beds in. For decades, the country has fought deflation (where prices fall each year, rather than rise). Big falls in the currency mean Japan will need to pay more for fuel, which it imports in large quantities, along with other goods and services. That will push up inflation further, to the point where the BoJ will have to raise interest rates to stem it. Yet it’s tough because there’s a chance that higher rates will snuff out the economic recovery the nation has nurtured for the past few years.

If you missed our Q1 Investment Insights webinar, you can watch it here. 


If you have any questions or comments, or if there’s anything you would like to see covered here, please get in touch by emailing review@rathbones.com. We’d love to hear from you.

 

 DOWNLOAD PDF

Bonds

UK 10-Year yield @ 4.37%

US 10-Year yield @ 4.67%

Germany 10-Year yield @ 2.58%

Italy 10-Year yield @ 3.89%

Spain 10-Year yield @ 3.37% 
 

Central bank interest rates

UK: 5.25%

US: 5.25-5.50%

Europe: 4.50%

Japan: 0-0.10% 

Key economic data for week commencing 29 Apr

Mon 29 Apr

US: Treasury refunding financing estimates

EU: Consumer confidence, Economic sentiment, Industrial sentiment  

Tue 30 Apr

UK: Mortgage approvals, Mortgage lending

US: Employment cost – benefits, Employment cost – wages, House price index, Conference board consumer confidence

EU: Core inflation rate, Inflation rate, GDP growth rate 

Wed 1 May

UK: Nationwide housing prices, Manufacturing PMI

US: Fed interest rate decision, Fed press conference, MBA mortgage applications, ADP employment change, Treasury refunding announcement, Manufacturing PMI, ISM Manufacturing PMI, Construction spending 

Thu 2 May

US: Balance of trade, Continuing jobless claims, Initial jobless claims, Exports, Imports, Factory orders

EU: Manufacturing PMI 

Fri 3 May

UK: Services PMI, Composite PMI

US: Nonfarm payrolls, Nonfarm payrolls private, Unemployment rate, Average hourly earnings, Average weekly hours, Participation rate, Composite PMI, Services PMI, ISM Services PMI

EU: Unemployment rate 

Popular Articles

Income Fund
4 June 2025

Income Fund | June 2025

Join Alan Dobbie and Carl Stick, managers of the Rathbone Income Fund, as they share how their disciplined approach has delivered first-quartile, market-beating returns so far in 2025—and what they believe lies ahead for income-focused investors.

Find out more

1 min

ethical bond fund field
30 April 2025

Ethical Bond Webcast | April 2025

After a period of volatility in risk markets, Bryn will give his views on the outlook for rates and credit markets and will go into how the Washington whack-a-mole politics are creating very short-term volatility.

Find out more

1 min

9341_multi-asset_webinar_cm.jpg
14 May 2025

Multi-Asset Webcast | May 2025

Join David Coombs, Head of Multi-Asset Investments of the Rathbone Multi-Asset Portfolios, for his next webcast on Wednesday 14 May at 10.00 am.

Find out more

1 min

MOST READ
  1. Income Fund | June 2025

  2. Ethical Bond Webcast | April 2025

  3. Multi-Asset Webcast | May 2025

  4. Review of the week: The emperor's new tariffs

  5. Beauty's in the eye of the bondholder

Popular Articles

Income Fund
4 June 2025

Income Fund | June 2025

Join Alan Dobbie and Carl Stick, managers of the Rathbone Income Fund, as they share how their disciplined approach has delivered first-quartile, market-beating returns so far in 2025—and what they believe lies ahead for income-focused investors.

Find out more

1 min

ethical bond fund field
30 April 2025

Ethical Bond Webcast | April 2025

After a period of volatility in risk markets, Bryn will give his views on the outlook for rates and credit markets and will go into how the Washington whack-a-mole politics are creating very short-term volatility.

Find out more

1 min

9341_multi-asset_webinar_cm.jpg
14 May 2025

Multi-Asset Webcast | May 2025

Join David Coombs, Head of Multi-Asset Investments of the Rathbone Multi-Asset Portfolios, for his next webcast on Wednesday 14 May at 10.00 am.

Find out more

1 min

MOST READ
  1. Income Fund | June 2025

  2. Ethical Bond Webcast | April 2025

  3. Multi-Asset Webcast | May 2025

  4. Review of the week: The emperor's new tariffs

  5. Beauty's in the eye of the bondholder

Let's Talk

Ready to start a conversation? Please complete our enquiry form, we look forward to speaking with you

Enquire
  • Important Information
    • Brexit Statement
    • Important information
    • Modern Slavery Statement
    • Accessibility
    • Privacy
    • Cookies
    • Cookie preferences
    • Complaints
  • Important Information
    • Consumer Duty
    • Voting disclosure
    • Assessment of value reports
    • TCFD Reports
    • SDR Consumer-Facing Disclosures
    • Financial Ombudsman Service
    • Financial Services Compensation Scheme
    • Glossary of terms and FAQs
    • MIFIDPRU8
Address

Rathbones Asset Management
30 Gresham Street
London
EC2V 7QN

Rathbones Asset Management Limited is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority and a member of the Investment Association. A member of the Rathbone Group. Registered Office 30 Gresham Street, London EC2V 7QN. Registered in England No 02376568.

© 2025 Rathbones Group Plc
Incorporated and registered in England and Wales. Registered number 01000403

Follow us
LinkedIn
City Hive Logo
ACT Logo

Rathbones Asset Management is delighted to be an early signatory of the ACT Framework created by City Hive

Diversity Project Logo

Rathbones Asset Management is a member of The Diversity Project

The value of your investments and the income from them may go down as well as up, and you could get back less than you invested.