Commerce Secretary Lutnick just threw down a bold prediction—GDP hitting 5% or higher in Q1 2026. But here's the thing: he made it crystal clear this is purely his personal take, not some official consensus. The gap between his view and Treasury Secretary Bessent's outlook? Significant. You're essentially looking at two different reads on where the US economy is headed in the near term. Lutnick's clearly in the optimistic camp, which could signal confidence in growth momentum, while Bessent appears more cautious. These kinds of divergences from top economic officials matter—they ripple through markets and shape how investors position themselves for what's coming.
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ser_we_are_ngmi
· 01-23 18:47
Lutnick is so optimistic to say that, 5% GDP? Come on, how dare this guy go to the sky, Bessent isn't even that aggressive... Two people singing opposite tunes, retail investors suffer.
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P2ENotWorking
· 01-23 11:35
Wow, 5% GDP growth? Lutnick really dares to say that, but then he says it's just his personal opinion... It sounds like he's leaving himself an escape route.
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LiquidationTherapist
· 01-20 19:56
Wow, Lutnick really dares to say it, over 5% of GDP? Wake up, Bessent clearly has a different script.
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OfflineValidator
· 01-20 19:55
The feeling of seller show and buyer show... one says 5%, the other remains cautious. When will these two get on the same page?
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CodeZeroBasis
· 01-20 19:44
Just listen to Rumnik's 5% GDP forecast; who should we believe when two ministers are contradicting each other?
Commerce Secretary Lutnick just threw down a bold prediction—GDP hitting 5% or higher in Q1 2026. But here's the thing: he made it crystal clear this is purely his personal take, not some official consensus. The gap between his view and Treasury Secretary Bessent's outlook? Significant. You're essentially looking at two different reads on where the US economy is headed in the near term. Lutnick's clearly in the optimistic camp, which could signal confidence in growth momentum, while Bessent appears more cautious. These kinds of divergences from top economic officials matter—they ripple through markets and shape how investors position themselves for what's coming.