Sunday marked the 100th day of Donald Trump’s second term, an arbitrary but politically significant check-in mark. The economic upshot: not good, and likely to get worse before it gets better. One problem is that we’re in a data black hole. Companies are reporting earnings for the three-month period that ended just before “Liberation Day,” and the latest unemployment figures just missed capturing DOGE’s big federal layoffs. That leaves economists sorting through forward-looking data like consumer sentiment (awful), CEO sentiment (also awful), real-time spending data (mixed), and corporate outlooks (mixed to bad). The S&P 500 had its worst first 100 days of any administration since Gerald Ford, who took over during the Watergate malaise and an Arab oil embargo.  General Motors and UPS are the latest companies to withdraw their 2025 profit projections, joining Walmart, American Airlines, and other consumer canaries. United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby told me last week that travelers were still booking summer vacations, “but that more discretionary [spending] — ‘We don’t have anything going on next weekend, let’s head down to the Bahamas’ — they’re pulling back from that… I think that’s probably true across the economy.”  Consumer sentiment now sits at its lowest level since July 2022, when inflation was surging, and at its second-lowest point since the University of Michigan first began to survey it in 1952.  The 30,000-foot view is a bit of a choose-your-own-adventure. Goldman Sachs’ index of financial conditions — a measure of how easily companies and individuals can borrow, invest, and transact — has returned to its pre-Liberation Day levels. The Fed’s version, on a one-week lag, has not. The bond market, whose freakout, you will remember, set off widespread panic last month, has settled but not forgotten: Investors are still charging Washington a higher interest rate to borrow.  What to watch: First-quarter US GDP data will be out Wednesday. Harvard economist Jason Furman’s advice is to separate the signal from the noise: Strip out exports, government spending, and inventories bulged by pre-tariff hoarding. Tired: Core inflation. Wired: “Core GDP.” |