The economic data reported this week presented a mixed picture. The first look at Q1 GDP showed growth of 1.6%, significantly lower than the previous rate of 3.4% and the consensus estimate of 2.4%. However, the GDP Deflator increased to 3.1% from 1.6%, surpassing the expected 2.9%. This combination of slower growth and higher prices raised concerns about stagflation. On a positive note, the labor market remained resilient, with Initial Claims falling by 5k to 207k and Continuing Claims dropping by 15k to 1.781m. In the upcoming week, we will get a look at the Employment Situation Report, which is expected to show the creation of 250k non-farm payrolls and an unemployment rate unchanged at 3.8%. Personal Income increased by 0.5%, as expected, while Personal Spending Increased by 0.8%, above the consensus estimate of 0.6%. Again, a healthy labor market allows the consumer to continue to spend. Finally, the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation, the PCE, came in line with expectations on both the headline and core at 0.3% on a month-over-month basis. On a year-over-year basis, the headline number increased by 2.7%, up from 2.5% in February, and the Core reading increased by 2.8%, which was unchanged from the February print.
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