Morgan Stanley just poured cold water on the U.S. GDP story.
At the core is the fact that Americans are getting larger tax refund checks, but not as large as they had hoped.
At the same time, gasoline prices have risen so high that the extra cash might not translate into meaningful spending power for consumers.
Consumer spending drives the U.S. economy, and the bank feels that the latest fiscal boost is unlikely to hit as big as the bulls would have wanted.
Tax refunds are up 14% from the same time last year, but are near the lower end of their forecast range.
Meanwhile, the average refund has risen to $346, but according to Morgan Stanley’s estimates, a 15% rise in gas prices, or about $3.60 a gallon, will be enough to wipe that out.
Putting it all together, Morgan Stanley is sticking with its lower 2026 GDP call, expecting real GDP growth of 2.2% and personal consumption rising 1.7%.
The data show that the U.S. economy pivoted from a Covid-led slowdown to a sharp snapback in 2021.
In the years that followed, the numbers settled into a more moderate growth pattern.
That said, here are the latest annualized real GDP growth numbers, based on the most recent BEA revisions for 2020-2024 and the BEA’s third estimate for full-year 2025.
2020: U.S. real GDP contracted 2.1%.
2021: U.S. real GDP expanded 6.2%.
2022: U.S. real GDP grew 2.5%.
2023: U.S. real GDP grew 2.9%.
2024: U.S. real GDP grew 2.8%.
2025: U.S. real GDP grew 2.1%.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA)
Using a household budget analogy, Morgan Stanley says the economy right now is like getting a bonus while also facing a larger bill.
Tax refunds will put some of the cash back in people’s pockets, helping with spending.
However, if gas prices jump by 15% (as they have now) and stay elevated, that extra dough just gets soaked up at the pump instead.
So naturally, when consumers have a lot less left for dinners outside, along with travel and shopping, that takes the energy out of the GDP as well.
On paper, the consumer got a break, but in reality, much of that help might disappear at the pump.
As of April 10, total federal tax refunds shot up to $253 billion, up 14.2%, or $32 billion, from the previous year.
That sounds robust, but it landed at the lower end of the bank’s 15% to 25% expectation range, and roughly 75% of refunds are typically already paid by mid-April.
MoreEconomy:
finance.yahoo.com
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