Economy April 13, 2026 08:13 AM

Barclays Lowers U.S. Q1 Growth Call After Tepid Consumer Outlays

Bank trims first-quarter GDP and consumption forecasts as income and sentiment soften; inflation pressures persist from energy

By Marcus Reed
Barclays Lowers U.S. Q1 Growth Call After Tepid Consumer Outlays

Summary: Barclays reduced its estimate for U.S. first-quarter GDP growth to a 2.5% annualized pace, citing weaker consumer spending and softer income trends at the start of the year. The bank also cut its Q1 personal consumption expenditure outlook and maintained an unchanged interest-rate path while flagging downside risks to activity tied to consumer sentiment and recent ISM readings.

Key Points

  • Barclays cut its U.S. Q1 GDP growth forecast to 2.5% quarter-on-quarter annualized and lowered its Q1 real PCE growth forecast to 1.0% annualized.
  • March inflation readings showed headline CPI up 0.9% month-on-month, driven mainly by energy, while core CPI rose 0.20% month-on-month; Barclays expects core PCE to return to a 0.2% monthly pace by H2 2026.
  • Labor market remains mixed: payrolls rose by 178,000 in March and unemployment slipped to 4.3%, but Barclays views part of the payroll strength as temporary and sees underlying job growth as moderate.

Barclays reduces Q1 growth forecast

Barclays has revised down its forecast for U.S. economic growth in the opening quarter of the year, trimming its GDP estimate by 0.5 percentage point to 2.5% quarter-on-quarter annualized. The bank pointed to underwhelming consumer spending and weaker income fundamentals during the early months as the primary drivers of the downgrade.

Full-year view and consumption outlook

On a full-year basis, Barclays now projects 2026 real GDP growth of 2.4% measured fourth-quarter-over-fourth-quarter. The firm also scaled back its estimate for real personal consumption expenditures in Q1 by a full percentage point to a 1.0% annualized rate, a move that feeds into the weaker GDP projection.

Recent data underpinning the revision showed real consumer spending rising just 0.1% month-on-month in February, while nominal income fell 0.1% over the same period. Those reads led Barclays economists to lower their consumption forecast and to adopt a more cautious stance on near-term demand.

Bank commentary on risks

On downside risks, Barclays' team led by Marc Giannoni wrote: "We view risks to both consumer spending and activity as skewed to the downside, given the deterioration in consumer sentiment and signal from the latest ISM prints." The note highlights consumer sentiment and manufacturing and services indicators as warning signs for household spending.

Inflation and energy effects

Inflation developments in March complicated the backdrop. Headline consumer price inflation accelerated 0.9% month-on-month in March - the fastest monthly increase since mid-2022 - with energy prices cited as the primary contributor. Core CPI recorded a more muted 0.20% month-on-month gain, slightly under expectations, with falling used car prices for a fourth straight month partially offsetting upward pressure from apparel and services.

Minutes from the March Federal Open Market Committee meeting showed officials growing more concerned about upside inflation risks stemming from higher energy costs. The minutes also exposed differences of view within the committee, with some participants favoring more explicitly hawkish language while others stressed that rates should eventually come down if inflation declines in line with expectations.

Policy outlook and inflation path

Despite the recent inflation pressures, Barclays left its interest-rate outlook unchanged. The economists continue to expect "the committee will regain confidence that inflation is moderating and returning toward the 2% goal" and forecast a 25 basis point cut in September, followed by another in March 2027. Barclays also projects that core PCE inflation will return to a target-consistent 0.2% monthly pace by the second half of 2026.

Consumer sentiment and geopolitical context

Consumer sentiment has weakened further, with the preliminary April University of Michigan survey showing consumer expectations at 46.1, the lowest level since March 1980. Barclays noted that 98% of interviews for the survey were completed before the April 7 ceasefire announcement, leaving open the possibility of a partial reversal in the final reading.

Labor market dynamics

On the labor front, March payrolls rose by 178,000, though Barclays' economists cautioned that part of that strength reflected temporary influences such as the return of striking healthcare workers and favorable weather. The unemployment rate decreased to 4.3%, a move the bank said was driven largely by slowing labor supply. "We view the data as pointing to a moderate pace of underlying job growth despite the sharp upside surprise in March payroll gains," the economists added.

Overall assessment

Barclays concluded that while a temporary ceasefire had calmed markets, the impact of the conflict remained visible across inflation expectations and consumer sentiment. The bank noted that longer-run measures "remain anchored for now." The mix of softer consumption, mixed inflation signals and labor market nuances informed the firm's more cautious Q1 growth estimate and its maintained, but gradually easing, rate path.


Risks

  • Downside risk to consumer spending and overall activity linked to deteriorating consumer sentiment and signals from recent ISM prints - impacts consumer-facing sectors and retail.
  • Upside inflation risk from higher energy prices that could pressure goods and services costs, affecting inflation-sensitive sectors and financial markets.
  • Labor market distortions from temporary factors such as the return of striking healthcare workers and favorable weather, which complicate assessment of underlying employment trends and could affect hiring-sensitive sectors like transportation and logistics.

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