Q3 GDP Reveals strong growth

By Paul gomme and peter rupert

The BEA announced that real GDP for the 3rd quarter showed strong growth, rising 4.3% on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis. This is the highest growth since Q3 of 2023. Consumption growth led the charge, increasing 3.5%.

While consumption has been strong, investment has not. Outside of the large swings, likely due to tariff announcements, investment has been dismal over the past year, declining three times in the past five quarters.

Policy Implications

Members of the FOMC wishing to hold interest rates fixed (or even raise them) will, no doubt, point to the high real output and consumption growth. Those advocating lower rates will emphasize the fall in investment as well as the weak jobs growth between September and November and the increase in the unemployment rate. Much rides on the core PCE inflation rate. Data for November was supposed to be released on December 19, but has been delayed; the next (scheduled) release is for December 2025 (not November) on January 29, 2026. That will not leave much time to digest the incoming inflation data since the next FOMC meeting is January 30-31. We will see where the FOMC comes down on the potential “risks” to the economy in terms of inflation and the real side of the economy.

Inflation and jobs

We are finally seeing jobs numbers for October and November. The Bureau of Labor Statistics press release studiously failed to mention the loss of 105 thousand jobs in October — except to mention the 162 thousand fall in federal government employment. Perhaps this omission is a leftover from Trump having fired the previous head of the BLS after the BLS revised the May and June employment numbers down. With September employment revised down to 108 thousand (from 119 thousand), there was a scant 3,000 increase in employment over September and October. November delivered an anemic 64 thousand job gain.

As noted in the BLS press release, due to the Federal government shut down, the household survey for October was not collected. In the figures using household survey data, we have allocated half of the change from September to November to each of October and November (and omit the October figure to emphasize that this data is unavailable).

The unemployment rate is similarly missing for October 2025. The November unemployment rate rose to 4.56%, up from 4.44% in September. This is the highest unemployment rate in four years.

Overall, the employment numbers are fairly weak. Although average weekly hours rose from 34.2 to 34.3, so that total hours of work in the US rose. Moreover, firms continue to be opening jobs at a relatively high rate even though the hiring rate has been falling.

Inflation

There were two price index reports released, the September PCE and the November CPI. The September monthly (annualized) PCE rose slightly, from 3.14% to 3.27%. Our preferred trend measure rose from 2.70% to 2.89%. The Fed’s inflation measure of choice, the core PCE (PCEX) fell from 2.68% to 2.40% and our trend measure also fell, from 2.82% to 2.68%. While core PCE inflation is moving in the right direction, it is still above the FOMC’s 2% target.

Due to the federal government shutdown, October data for the Consumer Price Index was not collected. Below, the November CPI inflation rate is the average for the two months from September to November. The monthly annualized CPI rate for October November averaged 1.23%, down from 3.79% in September and our trend measure fell to 2.19% (October-November) from 3.38% in September. In the graphs below we have included the November number with dots. Annualized core CPI inflation was 0.92% in October-November while the trend measure was 1.94%.

Certainly good news on the inflation front: the last reading on the Fed’s preferred core PCE inflation measure moved down (albeit still above target) and the more timely CPI measures have continued downward, a trend that hopefully will soon be reflected in the PCE inflation measures. As inflation approaches target, the inflation hawks on the FOMC will have less reason to insist on keeping interest rates high. At the same time, the slow hiring in the labor market should allow some to argue more strongly for more rate cuts.

A little Late: September Inlation

By Paul Gomme and Peter Rupert

The BEA, back up and running, announced that PCE inflation was 3.27% (on an annualized basis) in September, up from 3.14% in August. The year over year number also increased, from 2.74% in August to 2.79% in September. Our preferred trend measure also moved up, from 2.70% in August to 2.89% in September.

Excluding food and energy, PCEX, actually fell slightly, from 2.68% to 2.40%. The year over year number also fell, from 2.90% to 2.83%. Our calculated trend measure fell from 2.82% to 2.68%.

A Longer Perspective

Recall that in the pandemic period, the Fed fucked up badly on the inflation front. PCE/PCEX inflation started falling starting in mid-2022. Breaking the PCE price index into its components, goods and services, our chart shows that the bulk of the progress on the PCE/PCEX inflation front came from its goods component which declined rapidly in late 2022, and has exhibited deflation (negative inflation) for some time (so much for the Keynesian adage that prices are downward sticky). In contrast, PCE services inflation was slow to come down and has run persistently above the Fed’s 2% target for PCEX inflation.

This breakdown between goods and services has gained traction among those trying to parse out, in real time, the effects of the Trump tariffs on prices and inflation. The idea is that the effects of these tariffs will be seen first in goods prices. Through 2025, our charts show a gradual rise in PCE goods inflation; the large increase in the monthly goods inflation rate in September has pushed our measure of trend above the Fed’s 2% target. This behavior of PCE goods inflation is consistent with the tariffs story. That PCE/PCEX inflation has been flat (or mildly rising) in 2025 is now due to the moderating effect of somewhat lower PCE services inflation (albeit, still above the magic 2% target).

Once again the Fed is in a bit of a sticky position. Inflation is not moving in the right direction. The real side of the economy is chugging right along, see this bullish report from the Financial Times. The calls for another rate cut at the meeting next week, in our view, are premature.