Summary

  • US President Donald Trump spoke at an 'Invest in America' event at the White House this afternoon

  • Top executives from major companies such as Nvidia were in attendance - you can view it by clicking 'Watch Live' at the top of this page

  • Earlier, Trump held a Cabinet meeting with his leadership team, where he praised tariffs and businesses which he says are investing domestically

  • It comes after a new report shows the US economy shrank at an annual rate of 0.3% in first three months of the year as firms stockpiled imports ahead of Trump tariffs

  • It is the first time the US economy has shrunk since 2022

  • Trump has blamed Joe Biden, saying "bad numbers" on Wall Street have "nothing to do with tariffs"

  1. Trump blames Biden, says 'bad numbers' have 'nothing to do with tariffs'published at 14:27 British Summer Time 30 April
    Breaking

    US President Donald Trump has shared his thoughts on the economy after GDP figures were announced this morning, which indicates the US economy shrank 0.3% in first three months of this year.

    On Truth Social, Trump claims: "this is Biden’s Stock Market, not Trump’s".

    "I didn’t take over until January 20th. Tariffs will soon start kicking in, and companies are starting to move into the USA in record numbers," he says in a post on his Truth Social account.

    "Our Country will boom, but we have to get rid of the Biden “Overhang.” This will take a while, has NOTHING TO DO WITH TARIFFS, only that he left us with bad numbers, but when the boom begins, it will be like no other. BE PATIENT!!!"

  2. Economist suggests downturn could be a one-offpublished at 14:19 British Summer Time 30 April

    Michael Race
    Business reporter

    The surge in companies rushing to bring in more goods from overseas ahead of import taxes kicking in has been the main driver behind the US economy contracting.

    However, some economists are suggesting the downturn could prove to be a one-off.

    While the first three months of the year saw imports rise some 41.3%, "the surge now appears to be going into reverse," according to Paul Ashworth, chief North America economist at Capital Economics.

    That makes sense given a lot of firms shipped in the goods they wanted before the tariffs – and might be now looking for alternative and/or American-based suppliers, which is what Trump wants in order to boost American manufacturing.

    Ashworth predicts imports falling going forward will likely lead to the economy bouncing back in the next few months.

  3. As GDP shrinks, White House touts economic achievementpublished at 14:12 British Summer Time 30 April

    Bernd Debusmann Jr
    Reporting from the White House

    US President Donald Trump speaks during a rally to mark his 100th day in office, at Macomb Community College in Warren, MichiganImage source, Reuters

    Last night - to mark Trump's 100 days in office celebrations - the Trump administration proudly put out a statement touting its economic achievements, including investments from some of the firms whose CEOs are in town for the president's event later today.

    The statement boasted of over $5tn (£3.74tr) in investments, which it claims will create over 450,000 new jobs and usher in an age of "American prosperity".

    Among the current and planned investments listed are $500bn from Japan-based SoftBank and US-based OpenAI and Oracle, another $500bn from Apple in US manufacturing and training, $500m from Nvidia for US-based AI infrastructure.

    Additionally, the White House statements pointed to foreign investments pledged by foreign governments, including $1.4tn from the UAE, $1tn from Japan and $600bn from Saudi Arabia.

  4. Trump to meet with Cabinetpublished at 14:05 British Summer Time 30 April

    Today, US President Donald Trump has a Cabinet meeting at 11:00 EST (16:00 BST), a White House "investing in America" event at 16:00, and will phone-in for a televised town hall at 20:00.

    He's been on a media blitz to mark his first 100 days in office, which was yesterday.

    We'll be following his day closely to see if he addresses today's GDP figures.

  5. Analysis

    A worse outcome for growth than economists expectedpublished at 13:50 British Summer Time 30 April

    Dharshini David
    Deputy economics editor

    A BBC bar chart shows the GDP change in previous quarters. It shows a -1% dip in March 2022 (the bar chart is in red) and in previous quarters when it has grown, the bar chart is in blue. For the March 2025 bar chart, the bar is red and the figure -0.3% is shown

    Not 24 hours after the White House Press Secretary claimed that the American economy was going great guns, there's dramatic proof that it wasn’t – even ahead of so-called Liberation Day.

    This is a worse outcome for growth than economists expected. Some of the first quarter’s weakness was due to a surge in imports, as retailers stockpiled ahead of tariffs coming in – and that counts as depressing GDP growth.

    But, with consumer spending weak, there are clear signs that the damage to growth may be sustained.

    Influential economists had previously warned that the risk of the US economy falling into recession this year was close to 50%.

    Many will be hastily readjusting those expectations, fearing that the pain for households and businesses has come sooner and will be more acute.

    And don’t forget, Americans account for $1 in $6 of global consumer spending – if they’re not buying, it's harder for other countries to sell. We’re not immune to their pain

  6. Economy shrinks as companies race to get ahead of the tariffspublished at 13:43 British Summer Time 30 April

    Natalie Sherman
    New York business reporter

    We just got our first comprehensive read of how the US economy was doing at the start of the year.

    The US economy shrunk at an annual rate of 0.3% in the first three months of the year, the Commerce Department says.

    That marked a sharp downturn after growth at an annual pace of 2.4% in the previous quarter, though the fall was not as severe as some analysts had predicted.

    The decline was driven by drop in government spending and a more than 40% surge in imports – which count against growth - as companies raced to get ahead of the tariffs.

    Consumer spending growth also slowed from the end of last year, with growth of 1.8%, down from 4% in the prior quarter.

    Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent just yesterday urged people to focus less on sentiment and more on the hard data as they try to evaluate how the economy is doing.

    This report, which focuses on a period before US President Donald Trump’s most far-reaching tariffs were announced, is unlikely to settle the debate.

  7. US economy shrinks 0.3%published at 13:41 British Summer Time 30 April
    Breaking

    We have the initial data from the US Bureau of Economic Analysis. It indicates the US gross domestic product (GDP) decreased at an annual rate of 0.3 percent in the first quarter of 2025.

  8. CEOs at the White House todaypublished at 13:39 British Summer Time 30 April

    The North Portico of the White HouseImage source, Getty Images

    Multiple CEOs will visit the White House on Wednesday for Trump’s "invest in America" event, according to a White House spokesperson.

    Some of the notable companies include:

    • Nvidia CEO
    • GE Aerospace CEO
    • Johnson & Johnson CEO
    • Eli Lilly CEO
    • SoftBank CEO

    During a press briefing yesterday, the White House boasted having more than $5tn (£3.7tn) of investments in the US since Trump has entered office.

    The Trump administration is looking to boost the president’s economic gains amid polling that suggests a majority of Americans are displeased with some of his aggressive economic policies.

    His announcement of a sweeping tariff rollout has sent the stock markets tumbling and impacted the value of the US dollar. It has also impacted some relationships with key trading partners.

  9. Key economic report to set tone of the daypublished at 13:35 British Summer Time 30 April

    Brandon Livesay
    Reporting from New York

    Hello and welcome to our live coverage of US politics, where the economy is set to be the major talking point of the day.

    We're about to get data from a key economic report on the US gross domestic product.

    Then later today, US President Donald Trump will meet with CEOs from major companies for an investment event.

    There's plenty more happening today in the world of US politics, so stick with us.