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Economist Sounds Alarm: US Industrial Base Showing 2009-Level Weakness Hidden Behind Strong GDP Numbers

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
David Rosenberg warns that while GDP hit 4.3%, manufacturing data tells a darker story—only 11% of industries are growing, matching levels last seen during the Great Recession.

Here's an uncomfortable truth about headline economic numbers: sometimes they tell you a completely different story than what's actually happening on factory floors across America. David Rosenberg, president of Rosenberg Research, is making exactly that case right now, and his warning is hard to ignore.

When the Numbers Don't Add Up

The Bureau of Economic Analysis recently reported a robust 4.3% annualized increase in third-quarter real GDP, driven largely by government spending and consumer consumption. Sounds great, right? Not so fast, says Rosenberg. In a post on X this week, he highlighted what he sees as a massive disconnect between those official growth figures and what's actually happening in American industry.

According to December data from the Institute for Supply Management, only 11% of U.S. industries reported any growth whatsoever. That's down from 22% in November and 39% a year earlier. More troubling still, Rosenberg notes this 11% figure is "tied for the second-lowest reading since … April 2009, when the Great Recession hadn't even reached its worst point."

Let that sink in for a moment. We're supposedly experiencing a healthy expansion with 4%+ GDP growth, yet industrial participation looks like it did during the depths of the financial crisis.

The Manufacturing Reality Check

The official ISM Manufacturing PMI registered at 47.9% in December, marking the 10th consecutive month of contraction. Out of 18 manufacturing industries tracked, only two—Electrical Equipment and Computer & Electronic Products—reported growth. That's not broad-based expansion. That's an industrial base that's shrinking while the headline numbers suggest everything is fine.

Rosenberg has previously dismissed the third-quarter GDP numbers as a "fugazi," suggesting that once you strip away government spending and consumption fueled by depleted personal savings, real growth looks more like 0.8% than 4.3%. The industrial data seems to support his skepticism about whether this expansion has any real depth to it.

The Optimism Disconnect

What makes Rosenberg's warning particularly striking is the timing. According to Bank of America's December Global Fund Manager Survey, 94% of investors currently expect either a "soft landing" or "no landing" scenario. Cash allocations have crashed to record lows as investors pile into risk assets.

But if industrial participation is currently just as narrow as it was during the Great Recession, maybe that 94% consensus is missing something important. Perhaps the headline GDP strength is masking a severe, localized depression in the industrial sector—a risk that seems conspicuously absent from most market narratives right now.

For what it's worth, markets remained upbeat on Monday. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) climbed 0.67% to $687.72, while the Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which tracks the Nasdaq 100, advanced 0.79% to $617.99. Futures were pointing higher on Tuesday as well.

Whether Rosenberg's alarm proves prescient or premature remains to be seen. But when an economist starts making comparisons to 2009, it's probably worth paying attention to what the industrial data is actually saying.

Economist Sounds Alarm: US Industrial Base Showing 2009-Level Weakness Hidden Behind Strong GDP Numbers

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
David Rosenberg warns that while GDP hit 4.3%, manufacturing data tells a darker story—only 11% of industries are growing, matching levels last seen during the Great Recession.

Here's an uncomfortable truth about headline economic numbers: sometimes they tell you a completely different story than what's actually happening on factory floors across America. David Rosenberg, president of Rosenberg Research, is making exactly that case right now, and his warning is hard to ignore.

When the Numbers Don't Add Up

The Bureau of Economic Analysis recently reported a robust 4.3% annualized increase in third-quarter real GDP, driven largely by government spending and consumer consumption. Sounds great, right? Not so fast, says Rosenberg. In a post on X this week, he highlighted what he sees as a massive disconnect between those official growth figures and what's actually happening in American industry.

According to December data from the Institute for Supply Management, only 11% of U.S. industries reported any growth whatsoever. That's down from 22% in November and 39% a year earlier. More troubling still, Rosenberg notes this 11% figure is "tied for the second-lowest reading since … April 2009, when the Great Recession hadn't even reached its worst point."

Let that sink in for a moment. We're supposedly experiencing a healthy expansion with 4%+ GDP growth, yet industrial participation looks like it did during the depths of the financial crisis.

The Manufacturing Reality Check

The official ISM Manufacturing PMI registered at 47.9% in December, marking the 10th consecutive month of contraction. Out of 18 manufacturing industries tracked, only two—Electrical Equipment and Computer & Electronic Products—reported growth. That's not broad-based expansion. That's an industrial base that's shrinking while the headline numbers suggest everything is fine.

Rosenberg has previously dismissed the third-quarter GDP numbers as a "fugazi," suggesting that once you strip away government spending and consumption fueled by depleted personal savings, real growth looks more like 0.8% than 4.3%. The industrial data seems to support his skepticism about whether this expansion has any real depth to it.

The Optimism Disconnect

What makes Rosenberg's warning particularly striking is the timing. According to Bank of America's December Global Fund Manager Survey, 94% of investors currently expect either a "soft landing" or "no landing" scenario. Cash allocations have crashed to record lows as investors pile into risk assets.

But if industrial participation is currently just as narrow as it was during the Great Recession, maybe that 94% consensus is missing something important. Perhaps the headline GDP strength is masking a severe, localized depression in the industrial sector—a risk that seems conspicuously absent from most market narratives right now.

For what it's worth, markets remained upbeat on Monday. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) climbed 0.67% to $687.72, while the Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which tracks the Nasdaq 100, advanced 0.79% to $617.99. Futures were pointing higher on Tuesday as well.

Whether Rosenberg's alarm proves prescient or premature remains to be seen. But when an economist starts making comparisons to 2009, it's probably worth paying attention to what the industrial data is actually saying.