US GDP (Q1 2025 – 3rd estimate): reading the numbers
The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) revised real GDP for January-March down to an annualised -0.5 %, versus the prior –0.2 % second estimate, yet the level is still +1.99 % above the same quarter a year ago. Gross National Product (GNP) fell more sharply because cross-border income flows swung lower.
GDP vs GNP — why the difference matters
GDP is the value of all goods and services produced inside U.S. borders.
GNP adjusts GDP by adding income that U.S. residents earn abroad and subtracting income that foreigners earn in the U.S.:
GNP = GDP + (income receipts from rest of world) − (income payments to rest of world)
Because those receipts and payments mostly reflect profits, interest and dividends, GNP is often a clearer gauge of how much output-derived cash actually accrues to U.S. residents. When receipts fall faster than payments—as in Q1 2025—GNP can contract even if the trade balance looks steady.
Headline metrics
Metric (real terms) | q/q SAAR | q/q (not annualised) | y/y | Revision vs 2nd est. |
---|---|---|---|---|
GDP | -0.5 % | -0.12 % | +1.99 % | -0.3 ppt |
GNP | -1.0 % (≈-0.25 %) | -0.25 % | +1.83 % | -0.4 ppt |
Where the weakness came from
- Consumer spending: contribution cut to +0.09 ppt, mainly recreation and transport services.
- Exports: –0.11 ppt drag, led by royalties & business services.
- Imports: front-loaded goods kept the import line elevated.
- Government: –0.16 ppt as both federal and state outlays eased.
Why GNP shrank faster than GDP
- Income receipts from the rest of the world: –$91.6 bn q/q.
- Income payments to the rest of the world: –$54.6 bn.
- Net effect: roughly –$37 bn on GNP.
Three signals about the global cycle
- Advanced-manufacturing exporters are feeling the chill from weaker foreign demand.
- Partner economies are slowing faster, shown by softer U.S. imports.
- Despite the dip, the U.S. still posts near-2 % y/y real growth—rare among G-7 peers.
Market takeaways
Watch-point | Likely market implication |
---|---|
Multinationals’ ex-US revenue | Guidance risk in semis & branded industrials |
Fed rate path | Soft, not collapsing → patience remains the base case |
Dollar flows | USD stay-bid tone keeps EM FX under pressure |
Equity volatility | Institutional “drip-up” trade suppresses retail profit-taking |
Bottom line
Q1’s negative print signals a synchronised global slowdown more than a U.S. recession. Domestic momentum is still positive y/y, suggesting equity indices can grind higher on thin volumes while fundamentals stay sound.