Is the ‘mirage’ of reassuring economic data ending?

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Economic data is rolling over.

After an artificial bounce in economic data due to tariff front-running, the underlying economic data is beginning to roll. What comes next?

A couple of months ago on the Forward Guidance Roundup, we discussed the idea of an economic “mirage” forming, driven by the front-running of incoming tariffs.

The argument went like this:

Since the threat of tariffs was dangled for so long before they went live, companies were able to import as many goods as they could beforehand.

Because of this, net exports cratered, since that metric is computed as imports − exports, which mechanically leads to a lower GDP calculation. This is why we saw a very negative GDP print last quarter despite the actual economy being mostly fine.

This also led to a major acceleration in the trade balance:

Since companies had front-run all their imports, this dynamic reversed, where imports were minimal once the tariffs were actually implemented.

This led to a huge positive reversal in GDP nowcast:

Mechanically, this reversal in the other direction has trickled through the economy and led to a strong bounce in the soft data:

We’re now beginning to see early signs that this mechanical bounce in growth is beginning to head back lower.

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