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US economic growth rebounds on boost from exports

Washington - US economic growth picked up in the third quarter after an uninspiring first half of the year as a build in inventories and a soybean-related jump in exports helped cushion softer household spending.

The 2.9% annualised increase in gross domestic product, the value of all goods and services produced, was the biggest in two years and followed a 1.4% gain the prior quarter, commerce department data showed on Friday.

The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey called for 2.6% growth. Consumer spending, the biggest part of the economy, rose a less-than-projected 2.1%.

The data are in sync with the views of Federal Reserve policy makers that the economy is making slow and steady progress.

At the same time, solid employment and steady income gains are a sturdy base for households to continue in the role as the economy’s main driver of growth, a contrast with the drag from business investment.

"The economy continues to move forward," Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania, said before the report. "Domestic demand is resilient, though it’s not blowing the doors off."

Consumer purchases grew at about half the pace as in the previous three-month period and corporate investment in equipment declined for a fourth straight quarter, the longest such stretch of the current expansion.

Inventories rebounded in the third quarter after shrinking in the prior three months, contributing to growth for the first time since early 2015. Exports accelerated, adding the most to GDP since the final three months of 2013.

Final sales

To get a better sense of underlying domestic demand, economists look at final sales to domestic purchasers, which strip out inventories and exports. Such sales grew an annualized 1.4% last quarter after a 2.4% increase from April through June.

Central bank officials can point to evidence that growth is healthy enough to warrant raising interest rates, just not necessarily at the Fed’s gathering next week. Democrats and Hillary Clinton can claim the economy is improving, while Republicans and Donald Trump can just as plausibly say progress is tepid.

Economists’ GDP forecasts ranged from 1.3% to 3.6%. The estimate is the first of three for the quarter, with the other releases scheduled for November and December when more information becomes available.

Household purchases, which account for about 70% of the economy, grew at a slower pace after the prior quarter’s 4.3% jump that was the biggest since late 2014.

The median forecast in the Bloomberg survey was also 2.6%. Purchases added 1.47 percentage points to growth.

Disposable income

After-tax incomes adjusted for inflation climbed at a 2.2% annual rate, after a 2.1% gain in the prior three months. The saving rate held at 5.7%.

Net exports added 0.83 percentage points to GDP growth. Trade and inventories are two of the most volatile components in GDP calculations.

The Commerce Department said that the acceleration in overseas shipments was mostly attributable to an increase in exports of soybeans, indicating the pickup was probably temporary.

Inventory accumulation added 0.61 percentage points to GDP growth as stockpiles were rebuilt at a $12.6bn annualised pace after being cut at a $9.5bn rate.

The contribution ended a streak in which changes in inventories weighed on growth for five consecutive quarters, the longest period in almost six decades.

Business fixed investment increased at a 1.2% annualised pace, adding 0.15 percentage point to growth. The details, however, showed a mixed picture.

Spending on equipment fell an annualised 2.7%, after declining 2.9% in the prior three months. That was offset by more investment in office buildings, factories and other non-residential structures, which climbed at a 5.4% pace, the most in more than two years.

Home construction decreased at a 6.2% annualised rate, the second quarterly drop, and subtracted 0.24 percentage point from growth.

Government spending picked up, adding a modest 0.09 percentage point to GDP last quarter and led by more federal agency outlays.

The GDP report also showed price pressures remain limited. A measure of inflation, which is tied to consumer spending and strips out food and energy costs, climbed at a 1.7% annualised pace.

The GDP report comes days before the Fed’s rate-setting committee meets on November 1 to 2 and Americans go to the polls on November 8 to choose a new president.

Investors see a slim chance for a rate move when policy makers gather next week and a higher probability for December.

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