WRAPUP 1-Moderate rebound in U.S. economic growth seen in second quarter as inflation bites

* Second-quarter GDP estimated to increase at a 0.5% rate

* Trade seen accounting for rebound in growth

* Inventories likely a drag; consumer spending seen moderate

By Lucia Mutikani

WASHINGTON, July 28 (Reuters) - U.S. economic growth likely rebounded moderately in the second quarter as companies boosted exports and maintained a strong pace of spending on equipment, which could assuage financial market fears that the economy was already in recession.

The Commerce Department's advance second-quarter GDP report on Thursday will, however, still show that the economy was losing momentum because of high inflation that has prompted the Federal Reserve to aggressively tighten monetary policy.

"The economy is still doing okay," said Brian Bethune, an economics professor at Boston College. "It is not as strong as it was in 2021, but we are not in a recession."

According to a Reuters survey of economists, GDP growth likely rebounded at a 0.5% annualized rate last quarter. Estimates ranged from as low as a 2.1% rate of contraction to as high as a 2.0% growth pace.

The survey was, however, conducted before data on Wednesday showing the goods trade deficit in June was the smallest in seven months and shipments of non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft increased strongly.

The reports prompted JPMorgan to upgrade its second-quarter GDP growth estimate to a 1.4% rate from a 0.7% pace. Goldman Sachs raised its forecast by 0.6 percentage point to a 1.0% rate. Several other Wall Street banks also boosted their estimates. The Atlanta Fed lifted its estimate by four-tenths of a percentage point to a still negative 1.2% rate.

A slew of soft housing data as well as weak business and consumer sentiment surveys had heightened expectations for a second straight quarterly negative GDP reading. The economy contracted at a 1.6% pace in the first quarter.

The White House is vigorously pushing back against recession chatter as it seeks to calm voters ahead of the Nov. 8 midterm elections that will decide whether President Joe Biden's Democratic Party retains control of the U.S. Congress.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is scheduled to hold a news conference on Thursday to "discuss the state of the U.S. economy."

Another decline in GDP would meet the standard definition of a recession. But the National Bureau of Economic Research, the official arbiter of recessions in the United States defines a recession as "a significant decline in economic activity spread across the economy, lasting more than a few months, normally visible in production, employment, real income, and other indicators."