Total U.S. Trade Reaches Two-Year High in Nov.; Get Ready for "Blowout Real GDP Growth" for Q4
According to today's BEA report,  total U.S. trade with the  rest of the world (sales of U.S. products to  consumers and firms in other  countries PLUS purchases of foreign  production by American consumers and  businesses) reached $357.6 billion in November, the highest level in more than two years.   Total trade in November was the highest level of total  U.S. trade  since October 2008, and is more than $100 billion and 45.4%  above the April 2009 cyclical low of $246 billion (see  chart above).  This also makes the fourth consecutive month of total international trade above the $350 billion level in December 2007, when the recession started. 
Further,  the combined  international trade volume for U.S. buyers and sellers  has increased in 14 out  of the last 18 months (following ten  consecutive declines), providing further  evidence that the economy  started on a recovery path last summer and continues  to make solid  gains almost every month. Both the sales of U.S. goods and  services  produced by American firms and sold to the rest of the world, and the   purchases of foreign-produced goods and services by American consumers  and  firms, have been on an upward trend as the U.S. and global  economies  recover.
First Trust economists Brian Wesbury and Bob Stein are now predicting that net exports alone in the fourth quarter will add more than three percentage points to real GDP growth, resulting in a "blowout real GDP report of 5% to 6%" for QIV 2010.  

4 Comments:
Hope this coming blowout isn't depending on the accuracy of CPI numbers...:~)
This comment has been removed by the author.
The First Trust economists are predicing of 5-6% in Q4 2010 growth. Export growth lead the blow-out by accounting for over half of GDP growth. Hmmmmm
Sorry but if you look at the total picture things are not as rosy as claimed. We still have the financial sector reporting earnings on impaired assets that have little in the way of real market value and have the government under-reporting the inflation rate. We are still operating in make-believe accounting mode and will not see a real improvement in the real economy for a while longer.
Post a Comment
<< Home