0.7% GDP, 3.1% Core PCE: Rate Cuts Are Dead
Key Takeaways
- Q4 2025 GDP was revised down to 0.7% from 1.4%, well below the 1.5% consensus and a sharp deceleration from Q3's 4.4% growth.
- January core PCE inflation hit 3.1% year-over-year — the highest since early 2024 — and this data predates the Iran conflict's energy price shock.
- The Fed is effectively trapped: 0.7% growth argues for cuts, but 3.1% core inflation makes them impossible without risking credibility.
- Markets priced for 3-4 rate cuts in 2026 need to reprice for zero cuts — the data no longer supports an easing cycle.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis delivered a one-two punch on Friday morning. Q4 2025 real GDP was slashed to 0.7% annualized — half the advance estimate of 1.4% and well below the 1.5% consensus. At the same time, January's core PCE printed at 3.1% year-over-year, the hottest reading since early 2024 and a full percentage point above the Fed's target.
These are not ambiguous numbers. Growth is decelerating sharply — from 4.4% in Q3 to 0.7% in Q4 — while the inflation gauge the Fed actually watches is moving in the wrong direction. The soft-landing narrative that carried markets into 2026 is now competing with arithmetic that doesn't add up.
The Fed meets next Wednesday. Markets are pricing near-100% odds of a hold at 3.64%. After today's data, holding is the easy part. The hard question is whether the next move is a cut or a hike — and that answer just got a lot more uncomfortable.
The GDP Revision: Worse Than It Looks
A 0.7% GDP print is bad. The details are worse.
Consumer spending — roughly 70% of the economy — was revised down to 2.0% from 2.4%, driven by a sharp decline in healthcare services spending. Private domestic demand, the Fed's preferred measure of underlying economic activity, grew just 1.9%, half a percentage point lower than the initial estimate and a full point below Q3.
The 43-day government shutdown from October 1 through November 12, 2025 left fingerprints across the report. But blaming the shutdown is convenient cover. Full-year 2025 GDP came in at 2.1%, down from 2.8% in 2024. The deceleration was already underway before the shutdown hit.
Real GDP Growth: Quarterly Annualized Rate
The Q1 2025 contraction of -0.6% followed by a V-shaped rebound into Q3 masked the underlying trend. Strip out the volatility and the economy has been losing momentum for two consecutive quarters. The personal saving rate jumped to 4.5% in January — consumers are pulling back, not spending through uncertainty.
Core PCE at 3.1%: The Wrong Direction
Core PCE Price Index (Monthly)
The Fed's Impossible Position
What the Market Is Missing
Wall Street entered 2026 pricing in three to four rate cuts. That expectation is now functionally dead. Yet equity markets haven't fully repriced for a no-cut year.
The January durable goods report, also released Friday, reinforces the growth concern — orders were flat against expectations for a 1.3% gain. Capital expenditure is stalling. The AI capex boom that powered 2024-2025 earnings needs to show ROI in a 0.7% GDP environment, and the runway just got shorter.
Goldman Sachs has raised recession odds to 25%. The "Misery Index" — unemployment plus inflation — sits at approximately 7.5% (4.4% unemployment plus 3.1% core PCE). That's not 1970s territory, but it's the highest since the post-COVID adjustment period.
The critical data point to watch: Q1 2026 GDP, due in late April. If it doesn't show meaningful recovery from 0.7%, the narrative shifts from "higher for longer" to "recession watch." And that shift happens with the Fed's hands tied by 3%+ inflation.
Conclusion
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