Asking for a friend. From Atlanta Fed Today:
Now, as has been pointed out, some of this drop as or February 28 was driven by the mechanical inclusion of the trade balance, where imports deduct in an accounting sense. The outsize increase in imports – if reversed next release – should diminish the negative impact if imports have been moved forward in anticipation of tariff imposition.
Of course, like any tax, if the tariffs (say the ones due tomorrow on canada and mexico) are not implemented, then more imports will be shifted forward until the resolution of uncertainty.
For context, here are recent now and forecasts, as well as the GS tracking (where the forward shift of imports can be taken into account judgmentally).
Since the downward shift in gdpnow from 2/28 to 3/3 is primarily due to the ISM Mufacturing Index and Construction Numbers, one can be a little more certain of this latter downward revision.
The GS Tracking Forecast is at 1.6% q/q annualized, which is still decent, but slower than Q4.