Home

 
India Bullion iPhone Application
  Quick Links
Currency Futures Trading

MCX Strategy

Precious Metals Trading

IBCRR

Forex Brokers

Technicals

Precious Metals Trading

Economic Data

Commodity Futures Trading

Fixes

Live Forex Charts

Charts

World Gold Prices

Reports

Forex COMEX India

Contact Us

Chat

Bullion Trading Bullion Converter
 

$ Price :

 
 

Rupee :

 
 

Price in RS :

 
 
Specification
  More Links
Forex NCDEX India

Contracts

Live Gold Prices

Price Quotes

Gold Bullion Trading

Research

Forex MCX India

Partnerships

Gold Commodities

Holidays

Forex Currency Trading

Libor

Indian Currency

Advertisement

 
BLBG: U.S. Economy Grew at 2.2% Annual Rate Last Quarter (Update2)
 
By Timothy R. Homan

Dec. 22 (Bloomberg) -- The economy in the U.S. expanded in the third quarter at a slower pace than anticipated as companies curbed spending and cut inventories at an even faster pace, reductions that have set the stage for acceleration in growth.

The 2.2 percent increase in gross domestic product from July through September compares with a 2.8 percent gain previously reported by the Commerce Department in Washington.

Improved consumer spending combined with a record drop in stockpiles this year will promote increases in production that may keep the world’s largest economy growing well into 2010. At the same time, companies such as Dell Inc. point to gains in business investment that signal growing confidence the expansion will continue.

“We are really starting to see the mechanisms for a sustained recovery come into place,” said Robert Dye, a senior economist at PNC Financial Services Group in Pittsburgh. “We are starting to see investment numbers come back.”

Stock-index futures trimmed earlier gains after the report. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 0.3 percent to 1,111.5 at 9:00 a.m. in New York after having been up as much as 0.6 percent.

The 2.8 percent projected pace of growth was based on the median estimate of 73 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from gains of 2.5 percent to 3.7 percent. The GDP report is the third and final for the quarter. The government’s advance estimate two months ago was 3.5 percent.

Economic Slump

The economy shrank 3.8 percent in the 12 months to June, the worst performance in seven decades. The four consecutive decreases through the second quarter mark the longest stretch of declines since quarterly records began in 1947.

This month’s revisions also showed a bigger gain in earnings than first estimated. Third-quarter corporate profits increased 10.8 percent rather than 10.6 percent, marking the biggest gain in more than five years.

Productivity gains have boosted company earnings as payrolls are reduced. Labor costs fell at a 2.5 percent rate last quarter, capping the biggest 12-month drop in seven years, Labor Department figures showed earlier this month. Productivity, a measure of employee output per hour, surged at an 8.1 percent pace percent in the third quarter, the fastest pace in six years.

The economy has lost 7.2 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007. Payroll cuts peaked at 741,000 in January before receding to 11,000 in November.

Unemployment Forecast

The unemployment rate last month fell to 10 percent, from a 26-year high of 10.2 percent in October. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month forecast the jobless rate will remain above 10 percent through the first half of next year.

The elevated jobless rate is one reason Federal Reserve policy makers said last week they would keep their benchmark interest rate low for an “extended period.”

Another reason was that prices aren’t accelerating. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, increased less than forecast. The measure, which is tied to consumer spending and strips out food and energy costs, rose at a 1.2 percent annual pace following a 2 percent increase in the prior quarter.

Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, rose at a 2.8 percent pace last quarter, compared with the 2.9 percent rate forecast by economists and a 0.9 percent decline the previous three months. Spending added 2 percentage points to third-quarter growth.

Using Discounts

Retailers such as Best Buy Co. are using discounts to boost holiday sales. A report tomorrow is projected to show household purchases rose 0.7 percent in November for a second month.

Today’s report showed business fixed investment dropped at a 1.3 percent pace last quarter compared with a previously estimated 0.3 percent increase. Purchases of equipment and software increased at a 1.5 percent pace, less than the Commerce Department estimated last month. The drop in commercial construction was larger than estimated last month.

“Overall commercial spending is looking better than what we had hoped for,” Steve Felice, president of Round Rock, Texas- based Dell’s small- and medium-business division, said yesterday in a Bloomberg Television interview. “We’re coming into this holiday season much more optimistic than a year ago.”

Inventories dropped at a $139.2 billion annual pace, more than previously estimated. The decrease was smaller than the record $160.2 billion decline in the second quarter, adding 0.7 percentage point to growth.

Housing Stabilizing

Residential construction jumped at an 18.9 percent pace last quarter, the most in six year and adding 0.4 percentage point to growth.

Recent reports indicate the housing slump, which helped trigger the financial crisis, is showing signs of continued improvement. Home sales have been supported in part by tax credits for homebuyers and Fed purchases of mortgage-backed securities that have helped lower borrowing costs.

The economy will likely expand at a 3 percent annual rate from October through December, the median forecast in a survey earlier this month showed. Since then, economists at Credit Suisse and JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York have boosted their projections from 3.5 percent to 4.5 percent as inventories began to grow in October and exports rose.

Trade subtracted 0.8 percentage point from third-quarter GDP. The gap between exports and imports climbed to $357.4 billion at an annual pace from $330.4 billion.

To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net

Source