Economy April 20, 2026 08:50 AM

U.S. Growth Holds Up Amid Middle East Tensions, but Resilience Faces Tests

Barclays sees modest first-quarter expansion and fiscal support, but consumer demand and policy risks could challenge the run

By Marcus Reed
U.S. Growth Holds Up Amid Middle East Tensions, but Resilience Faces Tests

Barclays' tracking model shows U.S. GDP growing at a 2.3% quarter-on-quarter annualized rate in the first quarter, a reading notably above the GDPNow estimate. The bank attributes much of the outperformance to the normalization of government spending after last year’s federal shutdown, and it retains multi-year growth forecasts while flagging softer consumer spending and potential policy risks.

Key Points

  • Barclays' tracking estimate places Q1 GDP growth at 2.3% q/q SAAR, about one percentage point above GDPNow, largely due to government spending normalization after last year’s shutdown - impacts manufacturing, public-sector contractors, and logistics.
  • Industrial production fell 0.5% m/m in March, a softer-than-expected print that Barclays attributes to normalization in volatile components such as utilities, auto assemblies and mining; AI-related capital goods demand remains particularly strong - relevant for technology equipment suppliers and freight of capital goods.
  • Consumer spending is weak, tracking 0.8% q/q annualized through February; Barclays expects March retail sales to rise 1.3% m/m with the control group up 0.3% - matters for retail, trucking, and warehousing demand.
  • Barclays raised budget-deficit forecasts to $2.0 trillion for fiscal years 2026 and 2027, citing tariff revenue shortfalls and extra defense spending - fiscal lift could support aggregate demand in the near term.

The U.S. economy has so far absorbed the shock of the Iran conflict with limited disruption to aggregate activity, but Barclays warns the durability of that resilience is uncertain.

Barclays' tracking estimate places first-quarter GDP growth at 2.3% quarter-on-quarter on a seasonally adjusted annualized basis, roughly one percentage point higher than the GDPNow figure. The bank attributes most of the gap to the normalization of federal government spending following last year’s shutdown rather than an across-the-board pickup in private-sector demand.

Maintaining its medium-term outlook, Barclays keeps a baseline forecast of 2.4% GDP growth on a fourth-quarter-over-fourth-quarter basis for 2026 and 1.5% for 2027.

On the production side, a 0.5% month-on-month decline in industrial production in March came in softer than forecast. Barclays, however, judges that the fall largely reflects the normalization of volatile components - specifically utilities, motor vehicle assemblies and mining - rather than a broad-based weakening of demand. The bank highlights particularly strong demand for AI-related capital goods so far this year, calling that segment "riding especially high."

Consumer-side indicators are less sanguine. Through February, consumer spending is tracking at a modest 0.8% quarter-on-quarter annualized pace. Barclays projects March retail sales will rise 1.3% month-on-month, with the control group - a closer proxy for underlying consumption - up 0.3%.

On fiscal balances, Barclays has raised its budget-deficit projections to $2.0 trillion in both fiscal 2026 and fiscal 2027. The upward revision reflects likely shortfalls in tariff revenue alongside additional defense spending. The bank notes that larger deficits should provide a cushion for demand in the face of geopolitical headwinds.

Turning to monetary policy, Barclays expects the Federal Reserve to leave policy rates unchanged at its April meeting. The bank currently has two 25 basis-point rate cuts penciled in - one in September 2026 and another in March 2027 - but it also flags that risks are skewed toward a more prolonged period without easing.


Implications for markets and industry

  • Manufacturing and capital-goods sectors are seeing mixed signals: headline industrial production fell, but AI-related equipment demand remains strong.
  • Retail and consumer-facing industries are softer, consistent with tepid consumer spending growth through February.
  • Fiscal loosening tied to higher deficits may help support aggregate demand, with potential relevance for defense-related procurement.

Risks

  • Durability risk - Barclays notes uncertainty about how long the economy can withstand geopolitical shocks without broader demand weakening; this affects manufacturing, trade flows and freight volumes.
  • Monetary policy risk - While Barclays expects the Fed to hold in April and plans for cuts in Sep 2026 and Mar 2027, it warns risks are skewed toward a longer hold, which could influence borrowing costs and investment decisions across capital-intensive sectors.
  • Fiscal revenue shortfalls - Projected tariff revenue gaps combined with higher defense spending widen deficits to $2.0 trillion in FY2026 and FY2027, introducing uncertainty about the pace and composition of fiscal support for demand.

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