GDP's Final Word on Q1: The Number That Moved, and Why It Doesn't Mean What You Think
The Bureau of Economic Analysis released the third and final estimate of first-quarter 2026 GDP this week. The headline landed at 2.1% annualized real growth, revised up from the second estimate's 1.6% and above the advance estimate's 2.0%. Markets received it as a mild positive surprise. The more important question is what actually moved the number, because the answer is not what a 2.1% print typically implies. The number went from 2.0 to 1.6 to 2.1. What explains that arc? Both prior revisions in this series were driven by what BEA calls source data maturation. The advance estimate is published roughly a month after the quarter closes and relies heavily on BEA assumptions where Census Bureau data is not yet available. The second estimate incorporates updated inventory and trade data. In Q1's case, that revision pulled the number down to 1.6% as inventory and consumer spending data came in softer than assumed. The final estimate moved the number back up to 2.1%. Th...