Vital Statistics:

Stocks are lower after some weaker-than-expected economic data. Bonds and MBS are flat.
First quarter GDP fell 0.3% which was lower than the 0.2% Street expectation. The decrease was attributable to a larger-than-expected increase in imports. Consumer spending and investment were additions to GDP while government spending was modestly negative and imports were a big drag.
It looks like the GDP numbers were highly influenced by tariffs: the big increase in investment was primarily attributable to inventory build, while the increase in imports (from $4.1T to $4.6T) was probably driven by businesses trying to get ahead of tariffs. Note these are annualized numbers.
The drop in government spending was primarily attributable to defense.

More evidence the labor market is softening: Private sector employment rose by 62,000 last month, according to the ADP Employment Report. “Unease is the word of the day. Employers are trying to reconcile policy and consumer uncertainty with a run of mostly positive economic data,” said Dr. Nela Richardson, chief economist, ADP. “It can be difficult to make hiring decisions in such an environment.”
We saw wages increase 4.5% on average, a slight deceleration from March. Leisure / hospitality, construction, and finance saw the biggest increases in payrolls, while education / health and IT fell.
The Street is looking for 125k private payrolls on Friday, so this report portends a miss.
Consumer confidence fell in April, according to the Conference Board. The Present Situation index was marginally lower, but the expectations index hit a 13 year low. “Consumer confidence declined for a fifth consecutive month in April, falling to levels not seen since the onset of the COVID pandemic,” said Stephanie Guichard, Senior Economist, Global Indicators at The Conference Board. “The decline was largely driven by consumers’ expectations. The three expectation components—business conditions, employment prospects, and future income—all deteriorated sharply, reflecting pervasive pessimism about the future. Notably, the share of consumers expecting fewer jobs in the next six months (32.1%) was nearly as high as in April 2009, in the middle of the Great Recession. In addition, expectations about future income prospects turned clearly negative for the first time in five years, suggesting that concerns about the economy have now spread to consumers worrying about their own personal situations. However, consumers’ views of the present have held up, containing the overall decline in the Index.”

The view of current business conditions actually improved, however consumer views of the current labor market were lower. The conference board index comports with the University of Michigan numbers. The stock market decline is certainly weighing on sentiment, as is the uncertainty over tariffs.
Job openings fell to 7.2 million in March, according to BLS. February’s number was revised downward to 7.5 million. The quits rate ticked up to 2.1%, which was flat on a year-over-year basis. Job openings shot up in the aftermath of the COVID pandemic and began to fall starting in 2022. We are now almost back to pre-pandemic levels.
Filed under: Economy |
Exposing this kind of shit is the true genius of Doge. There are literally thousands of such agencies funded by the government. I’m as cynical as they come when it comes to government spending and even I am shocked at the sheer massiveness of this abuse.
Ultimately, I suspect that 99% or this stuff survives, as Congresspeople and their families and army of allies feed off this.
The US, sadly, is a blue whale carcass slowly rotting and being fed on, it’s huge so it takes a while to fully disappear. To paraphrase Johnny Rotten talking about the Sex Pistols, “{The US} is dead and we are feeding off its corpse .”
LikeLike
To wit:
https://x.com/datarepublican/status/1917353347293798835?s=46&t=vSGsUlnc4rLxcUf7zfUiHg
LikeLike
It’s unfortunate that DOGE has been badly mishandled to date as it was clearly needed.
LikeLike
I’m am sure it could have been handled better, most things can, with the benefit of hindsight, or even more thoughtful planning. The problem as I see it though is the disconnect between Congress and the electorate. Enough elected Congress people benefit financially from every increasing spending and ever increasing opacity that there is a huge incentive for those people to fight tooth and nail any and all spending cuts, restraints or streamlining. Until that dynamic changes, and I don’t see how, it wont. The best anyone tasked with this impossible endeavor to cut or at least streamline spending can hope to accomplish will be exposure, which I thing DOGE was initially VERY effective at and recently, less so. I suspect the assault on Elon and the Doge team, which I think has come equally from both sides, just less visibly on the right than the left, has squashed and further effort at exposure and reform.
LikeLike
I also think they over-promised initially and have undelivered to date.
I also think they should have tried to work with the existing inspectors general first before summarily firing them.
I suspect there was a whole lot of waste that was an open secret that they could have been pointed to and taken credit for.
LikeLike
Brent, what do you think the revision on Q1 GDP will look like?
LikeLike
I will be interested to see how the retailer earnings look in a few weeks.
LikeLike
Ok, thanks.
LikeLike
What I find fascinating in this post is the absolute faith in the media that the narrative carries the day and influences the entire electorate. Hence the belief that Democrat losses must equal a loss of media control. There is no consideration that the media is not particularly influential for either party.
https://www.dailykos.com/story/2025/4/29/2319543/-losing-the-break-room#comment_91205697
LikeLike
And, no due process!
LikeLike
Did the ADHD make him tranny?
LikeLike
Interesting analogy:
“The first 100 days of President Trump’s second term have done more damage to American democracy than anything else since the demise of Reconstruction.”
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/01/opinion/trump-100-days-opposition.html
LikeLike
“democracy” to the left means nothing more than “democrats getting their way”
LikeLike
Sounds like Waltz is out.
The left is spitting mad it isn’t Hegseth.
Jeffrey Goldberg aimed for Hegseth and shot his BFF Waltz.
LikeLike
I love the fact that the deeps state and Democrats (BIRM) are so ham-handed and bubbled that they actually thought it would work rather than exposing their internal conduit. I’m guessing Trump didn’t buy the “mystery” of how Goldberg’s contact got it either Walz or Wong’s phone.
Have you seen Trump’s ABC interview? It’s hilarious – at one point Terry Moran asks him if he’s 100% behind Hegseth and Trump essentially said that he’s not 100% sure of anything, including not being 100% sure he is going to finish the interview!
I’m still somewhat mystified over the DS/Democrat hatred of Hegseth. What’s he done re Pentagon spending, which is what I suspect they really care about?
LikeLike
The left hates him because he is going to “erase” the “gains” made by the left with respect to women in combat and trans by re-instating physical standards and requiring that everyone meet them.
LikeLike
I see your point, it just seems to be such a weird hill to die on. Maybe it’s because I’m not a lefty and don’t perceive how inequitable society is, but I also don’t think the deep staters and elected democrats think that either. I go back to money and grift and the close to a trillion dollar a year DoD spending.
LikeLike
Feminism is the North Star of the Democrat party.
Nothing is more important.
LikeLike
You sure that trans rights don’t trump feminism now?
LikeLike
The annoying thing is that they gave up a seat in the House for all this drama.
And now the Democrats have a forum to air grievances with his UN nomination. We’ll see if they overreach there.
LikeLike
A Republican won the seat, so while it was vacant for a while it’s still in Republican hands. Ditto Gaetz’s seat.
Re, hearings drama, how impactful with the electorate are they, really? Won’t the distraction help as they work on the big, beautiful bill? Finally, do they really want to hurt Walz if he or his close aides are their conduits?
LikeLike
Ken Rogoff on the Trump economic plan
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/02/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-kenneth-rogoff.html
LikeLike
This caught my attention:
LikeLike
I think the Miran plan is just a thought exercise, not actual policy. The bottom line is that no other country has the liquidity to be the reserve currency, and China will never permit its markets to have the openness to be a reserve currency.
As Bill Gross is fond of saying: The US is the cleanest dirty shirt in the bunch.
Also, the US and the UK have the highest short term rates (4.5%) of the major economies. The Eurozone is 2.4%. Japan is 0.5%. Canada is 2.75%. China is 3.1%. Switzerland is 0.25%. South Korea is 2.75%. The idea that we have excessively low borrowing costs due to the status as a reserve currency is nonsense.
You want to weaken the dollar, cut rates.
LikeLike
This is handy.
https://x.com/dw_politics/status/1918219595510382598?s=46&t=vSGsUlnc4rLxcUf7zfUiHg
LikeLike
https://chrisbray.substack.com/p/the-warning-is-its-own-punchline
LikeLike
That’s a good piece and ends with a Solzhenitsyn vibe: “They are lying to us, we know they are lying, they know we know they are lying, but they keep lying anyway.”
LikeLike
Oh, it will be so hilarious if the Democrats start saying nice things about Charles Koch.
https://time.com/7282130/charles-koch-speech-trump-tariffs/
LikeLike
If the D’s start saying nice things about Charles Koch, what happens when Trump has George and Alex Soros over to Mar a Lago? Does a singularity develop?
LikeLike
No. That happens when JD Vance chooses Bernie Sanders as his VP candidate in 2028.
LikeLike
Worth a read:
https://chrisbray.substack.com/p/come-visit-late-weimar-california
LikeLike
The tweet is perfect:
https://chrisbray.substack.com/p/california-jonestown
LikeLike
Someone isn’t being a good Democrat so they get a hit piece
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/john-fetterman-struggle-mental-health-clinical-depression.html
LikeLike
I did read that piece and it was hilarious! The butthurt going on with his staff is wild. Is there a reason he keeps them around? I mean, for reasons other than he likes to fuck with them? The other option is he tells them to bad mouth him to media to keep their options open in the progressive protection racket job market.
LikeLike
I think most are ex-staff. What it shows clearly is how the “groups” in the Democratic Party believe that they run the show instead of the actual elected office holders.
Of course, it helps when you have a party that is so geriatric this is often a practical necessity brought to it’s apotheosis with Biden himself.
What’s really amusing is to watch them now trot out the arguments that the Republicans were using against Biden and against Fetterman himself during his campaign after all the deflection they did at the time. And after attacking anyone in the media who questioned his fitness after the stroke announcement but before he won the election.
LikeLike
Curious how much Senator Wicker thinks the DoD budget should be? It’s already above $1 Trillion.
Insatiable n
LikeLike
I cannot decide which is better, that it’s trolling or it’s true.
https://www.axios.com/2025/05/02/stephen-miller-national-security-adviser-candidate
The hearings will be epic! It will make the Clarence Thomas or Ollie North hearings appear downright quaint.
LikeLike
There are no hearings. It’s not a Senate confirmed position.
LikeLike
Well, piss!
LikeLike
They’ll work it into Waltz’s UN Ambassador consolation prize hearings.
LikeLike
Wow
“Trump administration plans major downsizing at U.S. spy agencies
The CIA plans to cut 1,200 positions, along with thousands more from other parts of the U.S. intelligence community.
May 2, 2025 at 4:39 p.m. EDT”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2025/05/02/cia-layoffs-trump-administration/
LikeLike
Well, ok.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/60-minutes-set-air-segment-225854038.html
LikeLike
I believe the response to this hypocrisy is “false equivalence”.
LikeLike
The full extent of the COVID lying is finally becoming known:
https://www.vox.com/the-gray-area/411193/politics-covid-frances-lee-partisan-divide
LikeLike
And another one:
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/whos-to-blame-for-the-catastrophe-of-covid-school-closures.html
LikeLike
Still the GOAT of Tweets.
LikeLike
Republican drama in Virginia:
https://www.politico.com/news/2025/05/03/youngkin-reid-virginia-lieutenant-governor-gop-00325189
LikeLike
Good interview:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/opinion/ezra-klein-podcast-marie-gluesenkamp-perez.html
LikeLike
To me, this is an argument for overturning Wickard v Filburn. I would love to hear her position on that.
LikeLike
From the same article,
My dad used to say: You can talk about your values all day long, but you see somebody’s tax returns and you know what they really think.
I have no idea what this is supposed to mean. Is it some sort of heuristic that paying as much taxes as possible is morally good? Considering all the immoral things the government spends money on, that’s dubious at best. Is it saying that taking every advantage in the tax laws one can is morally good? That’s sounds reasonable to me as you are encouraging compliance with the law.
I suspect it’s the usual liberal horseshit libs say to themselves while taking advantage of what they call loopholes when Republicans take advantage of it.
LikeLike
Sounds like Medicaid fraud to me:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/06/upshot/medicaid-hospitals-republicans-cuts.html
LikeLike
I’ll check back on this in 6 – 8 weeks:
https://substack.com/@kathleenweber/note/c-114853584
LikeLike
Scott – how to game the system to prevent challenges to final deportation orders:
https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-lede/trumps-deportees-to-el-salvador-are-now-ghosts-in-us-courts
LikeLike
If Trump wants to get Ed Martin confirmed he needs to let Tom Thilis and Bill Cassidy’s Senate staff staff know that they will not be getting lucrative jobs post government employment. Any former staffers of these two currently in government should be fired and any firms former staffers work at need to be immediately frozen out of any government or Republican Party contracts. Even if Thillis and Cassidy go down fighting, every other Republican Senator will take notice.
LikeLike
Brent, this seems excessive for one carrier:
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/07/world/middleeast/us-navy-fighter-jet-truman-carrier-red-sea.html
LikeLike
sounds like a mechanical issue
LikeLike
True, the string of incidents was what I was referring to:
LikeLike
That is strange. I didn’t know it was that bad.
LikeLike
George, you may find this amusing:
https://benthams.substack.com/p/the-unfuck-america-tour-is-why-the
LikeLike
That was funny!
LikeLike
Good piece on the fight over language.
https://www.theradicalist.com/p/trans-women-are-trans-women
LikeLike