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Q2 2026 GDP: Forecasts Rise Despite Hawkish Fed – The Paradox of U.S. Resilience

Ongoing story : Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era· Part 12/18

Macro Jun 30, 2026 at 16:498Add to bookmarks

Q2 2026 GDP: Forecasts Rise Despite Hawkish Fed – The Paradox of U.S. Resilience
British Library · Unsplash

As markets digest the worst monthly close for the Mag7 since 2022, U.S. Q2 2026 growth surprises on the upside. A macro paradox that reinforces the "higher for longer" stance and complicates any Fed pivot scenario before the end of the year.

The Fact

At the close of Q2 2026, the U.S. economy shows unexpected resilience. The May 2026 core PCE came in at +4.0-4.1% (BEA) – well above the Fed’s 2% target – but employment remains robust, and corporate capex (AI infrastructure, defense, energy) supports domestic demand. Market participants (Seeking Alpha, 06/30/2026) report upward revisions to Q2 GDP forecasts, confirming that the anticipated recession has not materialized despite 18 months of restrictive monetary policy.

Our Take

This GDP resilience is precisely what prevents Warsh from pivoting: a strong economy with 4% inflation does not call for rate cuts. The paradox for investors: strong Q2 growth reinforces the "higher for longer" scenario, weighs on Mag7 valuations, and extends the rotation observed since June 23. This is the most difficult regime to navigate – neither a clear recession (bond buying) nor rapid disinflation (growth buying). Macro resilience becomes an argument for a strong dollar, real assets with positive yields, and a Fed with no urgency to ease before seeing PCE clearly below 3%.

To Watch

  • Official Q2 2026 GDP release (BEA, end of July): confirmation or revision
  • FOMC July 29-30: Does macro resilience justify an additional +25 bps?
  • July manufacturing/services PMI: leading indicator of Q3 2026 dynamics

Article produced by artificial intelligence, reviewed under human editorial control.

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Heinrich VogelÉconomiste macro & banques centrales (Francfort)
Il suit la Fed, la BCE et les grands équilibres macroéconomiques mondiaux.
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the_contrarian 01 Jul 2026 · 05:20

Q2 GDP pop masks the productivity mirage-tech layoffs + capex cuts say the real story’s in the margins, not the headline.

Finanz_Fuchs 30 Jun 2026 · 13:03

Q2 2026 zeigt nur, dass die USA noch immer die Schuldenorgie der Pandemie-Jahre verbrennen - bis der Kater kommt.

le_sceptique 30 Jun 2026 · 15:19

Le Kater viendra quand les taux longs rattraperont les dettes, pas avant.

L. from Leeds 30 Jun 2026 · 12:49

Q2 GDP pop is a sugar rush-what happens when the fiscal cliff hits in Q4 2026? Second-order effect: liquidity drain meets sticky inflation.

eco_analista_BCN 30 Jun 2026 · 12:43

El PIB del Q2 2026 ignora el costo de la deuda corporativa no financiera: +8% interanual en tasa de impago según Fed de NY (junio 2026). ¿Resiliencia o espejismo de liquidez?

Finanz_Fuchs 30 Jun 2026 · 12:38

Q2 2026 ist kein Paradox, sondern ein verzögerter Reflex der lockeren Geldpolitik - die Rechnung kommt noch, nur später als gedacht.

Ph. Renard 30 Jun 2026 · 12:32

À mon époque, un PIB qui grimpe avec des taux à 5% et une dette explosive, c’était un signe avant-coureur, pas une victoire. Les jeunes appellent ça de la résilience.

J.P.R. 30 Jun 2026 · 12:31

La croissance du Q2 2026 cache des déséquilibres sectoriels : les Mag7 masquent une fragilité des PME, toujours sous pression des taux. Un château de cartes macro.

le_sceptique_financier 30 Jun 2026 · 12:01

Permettez-moi de douter... Comme dans *Le Guépard*, tout change pour que rien ne change. La Fed souffle le chaud et le PIB rit ? Trop beau.

1
Story timeline

Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era

  1. 1Warsh vs Trump: The Fed Resists - and Bond Markets Listen Closely23/06/2026
  2. 2Kevin Warsh Reasserts Fed's Stance: Independence Reaffirmed, Prolonged High Rates, Trump at an Impasse23/06/2026
  3. 3Kevin Warsh at the Fed: Independence Reaffirmed, Prolonged High Rates, Trump at an Impasse23/06/2026
  4. 4Goldman Expects a Persistently Hawkish Fed with Warsh: Markets Resume Rate Pricing23/06/2026
  5. 5Goldman Anticipates Fed's Warsh: High Rates Until 2027, Markets Undervalued on the Pivot24/06/2026
  6. 6Goldman validates Warsh's thesis: the Fed will remain hawkish longer than the consensus anticipates24/06/2026
  7. 7PCE May 2026: U.S. Inflation Exceeds 4%, Warsh's Fed Under Maximum Pressure25/06/2026
  8. 8Kevin Warsh softens his signal: the Fed between anti-inflation credibility and political pragmatism26/06/2026
  9. 9But under $4,000: four weeks of pullback and opportunity cost takes over26/06/2026
  10. 10Low Oil Prices and the Fed: The Deflationary Paradox That Could Trap Warsh26/06/2026
  11. 11Warsh "hammer" & BoJ "appropriate": two central banks fine-tune their signaling ahead of July's double FOMC-BoJ meeting28/06/2026
  12. 12Q2 2026 GDP: Forecasts Rise Despite Hawkish Fed – The Paradox of U.S. Resilience30/06/2026
  13. 13SCOTUS protects the Fed's independence: a hawkish constitutional lock for markets01/07/2026
  14. 14Warsh wants the Fed to talk less. Wall Street is listening even harder.02/07/2026
  15. 15Trump renews offensive against the Fed: governors in the crosshairs03/07/2026
  16. 16NFP June 2026: Disappointing Jobs, Deceptive Unemployment - The Fed Trapped Ahead of the FOMC03/07/2026
  17. 17Warsh: AI Has "Immense Implications" for Rates – Framework Signal or Smokescreen?03/07/2026
  18. 18Gold and central banks: the WGC 2026 survey confirms a structural accumulation cycle04/07/2026
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