President Donald Trump got one of the best headlines of his presidency on Friday with a highly tweetable report showing the U.S. economy grew at its fastest rate in four years.

But the big number risks becoming fool’s gold.


Trump’s trade war propelled U.S. exports in the second quarter as China and other countries rushed to snap up American soybeans and other products ahead of impending tariffs, lifting growth in ways likely to be reversed in the coming months.

And as Trump continues to argue that the strong economy and stock market offer him leeway to press his aggressive approach, his trade battles could wind up slowing an economy that is among the GOP’s strongest selling points to voters.

The Commerce Department on Friday estimated the U.S. economy in the second quarter expanded at a 4.1 percent annual pace. That was the fastest since the 5.2 percent rate in the second quarter of 2014, the top performance of President Barack Obama’s tenure.

The report on gross domestic product showed the latest second-quarter figure boosted a full percentage point due to exports. Consumer spending also was relatively strong, a boost attributed in part to tax cuts.

“These numbers are very, very sustainable. This isn't a one-time shot. I happen to think we're going to do extraordinarily well in our next report next quarter. I think it's going to be outstanding,” Trump said Friday morning on the South Lawn of the White House.

Eric Winograd, senior U.S. economist at Alliance-Bernstein, said the spike in growth tied to exports is “going to be paid back in the next quarter.”

Economists‘ estimates ahead of the report had been from just under 4 percent to well over 5 percent.

Speaking at an event in Illinois on Thursday, Trump boasted about "very big numbers" in the coming GDP report. "I don't know what they are but I think they'll be terrific," he said.

Wall Street’s concern over potential trade wars was on display Wednesday as shares spiked on initial reports of a deal between the U.S. and the E.U. to avoid Trump’s threatened 20 percent tariffs on all imported automobiles and auto parts.

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When Trump and European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker emerged into the Rose Garden it turned out they had only agreed to further talks. The threat of auto tariffs remains, though it’s reduced for the moment.

Trump could face the same thing that happened to Obama, a burst of growth followed by a fizzle.

“Trade and inventories together are contributing around 2.2 percent to headline GDP — nearly half of the growth we are estimating,” Morgan Stanley analysts wrote in a note to clients this week. “We find evidence that the hefty contributions from these two categories is likely a reflection of stockpiling ahead of the implementation of trade tariffs, and so they are likely to subtract from growth in the following quarters.”

Major banks and forecasters suggest expect the economy’s growth rate to return to a pace of around 2.5 percent to 3 percent, a good-but-not-great pace in the second half of the year. Next year could be slower as the impact of tax cuts and increased government spending begin to wane and the Federal Reserve continues to hike interest rates.

Things could get worse if tariffs continue to bite U.S. manufacturers and farmers who are already complaining loudly about increased costs and sagging prices for their exports. Concern in the farm belt already led to a proposed $12 billion bailout from the Trump administration.

“The trade war would become significantly more costly if an all-out global trade war erupted and if global equity markets dropped in response,” Goldman Sachs analysts wrote. Fitch Ratings this week estimated that a trade war with tariffs on $2 trillion worth of goods could reduce global growth in 2019 from 3.2 percent to 2.8 percent and would knock nearly 1 percentage point off the U.S. growth rate.

Republicans on Capitol Hill — nervous about polls showing Democrats with a growing lead on the generic ballot and Trump’s approval dropping in the Midwest — are increasingly pressuring Trump to drop his tariff threats. They were particularly incensed by the farm bailout.

“It’s terrible. I mean we are compounding government errors,” Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) said on MSNBC. “And the pity of this is the economy is doing so well. The response to our tax reform, to the deregulation that we and the president have pursued jointly has been phenomenally successful. I’m afraid it could really be jeopardized by this downward spiral on trade.”

Trump, meanwhile, is encouraging Republicans to have patience with approach, arguing it will win significant concessions from Europe, China and other trading partners and that all the gloom and doom on the economy will never materialize.

“From the standpoint of the United States, we've never done this well,” Trump said alongside Juncker on Wednesday, though the U.S. has enjoyed many periods of faster growth than the current one. “But we’re going to do a lot better after we do this deal and other deals that we’re currently working on.”

Economists largely concur that the U.S. is doing well enough to withstand short-term trade dislocations. The stock market thus far has largely shrugged off Trump’s approach, selling off only slightly on negative trade news only to quickly recover lost ground.

“Yes, we do have that extra bandwidth right now,” said Winograd. “I’d question the idea that you have to rattle the cage on trade but it’s best to do it from a position of strength even if you get a modest slowdown as the result.”

The nightmare scenario for Republicans — and the U.S. economy — is that Trump sours on his current détente with the E.U, imposes auto tariffs, ratchets up his battle with China and winds up junking NAFTA, all while believing the U.S. economy and markets are strong enough to withstand it all.

Because they might not be.

“The fact that equity markets are near all-time highs and the growth numbers are so strong only encourages all this belligerence,” said Jim O’Sullivan of High Frequency Economics. “They could almost do with a good scare from that perspective. Because if trade wars get worse and equity markets wind up tumbling 15 or 20 percent, that’s going to feed into confidence numbers and you won’t see 3 percent growth continuing, that’s for sure.”