US Economic Growth Slows

The pace of US economic growth slowed slightly during the third quarter as business investment declined, although solid consumer spending and an improvement in the housing sector kept economic growth on track.

Key Facts

  • GDP rose at an annual rate of 1.9 %, adjusted for inflation and seasonality, the Commerce Department said.
  • That marked a slight slowdown from the second quarter, when the economy grew at a 2.0% annual rate.
  • Economists surveyed by WSJ expected a 1.6 % growth reading for the third quarter.
  • Growth was boosted by government and consumer spending, residential investment and exports.
  • That was partly offset by a drop in business investment.

Analysis

The report showed the divergence between relatively solid consumer spending and falling business investment continued from the second quarter into the third, as the long-simmering trade war with China escalated. Though it was solid, consumer spending moderated to a 2.9 % annual rate in Q3, from a 4.6 % rate in Q2. Consumers are the lifeblood of the US economy, as their spending accounts for nearly 70 % of output.

Consumer spending growth offsets business investment decline in 1.9% GDP increase.

U.S. economic growth settled in at a lower gear in the third quarter, with consumer spending and housing investment increases offsetting a business investment drop.

Gross domestic product—the value of all goods and services produced in the U.S.—rose at an annual rate of 1.9 % from July through September—adjusted for inflation and seasonality, the Commerce Department said Wednesday, compared with 2.0 % in the second quarter.

“I think it’s consistent with an economy that’s just moving back towards trend,” Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said of the growth reading.

The stronger-than-expected growth rate was boosted by government and consumer spending, residential investment and exports. Still, business spending declined for the second quarter in a row. Investment in structures dropped sharply, particularly those related to the petroleum and natural gas industries.

The Commerce Department report showed the divergence between relatively solid consumer spending and falling business investment continued from the second quarter into the third, as the long-simmering trade war with China escalated. The report came hours ahead of a scheduled rate announcement from policy makers at the Federal Reserve, who conclude a two-day policy meeting later Wednesday, October 30, 2019.

The central bank cut interest rates twice in the third quarter. Officials are expected to again cut the benchmark federal-funds rate by a quarter percentage point, to a range between 1.50 % and 1.75 %, aiming to shield the economy against growing risks of a sharper economic slowdown.

Compared with the third quarter a year ago, output grew 2.0 %—the weakest quarterly year-over-year rate since the final quarter of 2016.

Consumer spending moderated to a 2.9 % annual rate in the third quarter, from a 4.6 % rate in the second. From a year earlier, consumer spending increased 2.5 % in the third quarter, roughly consistent with the pace over the past year.

Consumers are the lifeblood of the U.S. economy, as their spending accounts for nearly 70% of output. The report showed their spending on big-ticket items such as cars and appliances slowed but remained strong, while spending on services slowed.

The slower pace of consumer spending in the third quarter came despite a solid financial foundation for many U.S. households. The unemployment rate was at half-century lows from July to September, and wages and incomes rose. Consumer sentiment has remained strong in recent months and rose slightly in October, according to the University of Michigan’s Surveys of Consumers.

The housing sector was a tailwind for growth as residential investment rose at a 5.1 % annual pace. The boost, which followed six straight quarters of declines, likely reflected lower short-term interest rates propelling construction and improvements.

The Commerce Department data also offered evidence of slowing corporate demand. Nonresidential fixed investment—which reflects business spending on software, research and development, equipment and structures—fell at a 3.0 % rate.

Equipment spending on aircraft also decreased amid the continuing grounding of Boeing Co.’s 737 MAX jetliner and probes into the causes of two deadly plane crashes involving the Boeing plane, a Lion Air jet in October 2018 and an Ethiopian Airlines MAX in March

Private investment in aircraft equipment was USD 22.5 billion annualized and adjusted for inflation in the third quarter, less than half the USD 48.1 billion rate in the final quarter of 2018.

Business-investment data can be volatile from one quarter to another, but the weak number in the latest report suggests factors including political uncertainty and the outlook for trade tariffs are weighing on business decisions to spend on new equipment and plants.

D’Anne McCumber, general manager at equipment maker Oilfield Improvements, Inc. in Broken Arrow, Okla., said “things have slowed down just a little bit, but not severely,” compared with the first and second quarters of this year.

“Right now people are in a bit of a holding pattern, it happens in the oil and gas industry at the beginning of a campaign year,” she said.

Low energy prices have “definitely restricted activity and investment in the oil and gas space,” said Aron Deen, director of marketing and business development at Fort Worth, Texas-based oil-drilling equipment maker Ulterra Drilling Technologies.

“The market buzz in oil and gas has been basically trying to restrict spending to cash flow,” he said.

The decline in business investment is a sign that the 2017 tax law isn’t having the effects its authors predicted and desired. The law cut corporate tax rates and allowed immediate deductions for capital investment, and raising the after-tax rate of return was supposed to encourage companies to spend on factories and equipment.

After an early jump in 2018, investment has slumped. It has been dragged down by uncertainty over the trade war and global economy. In addition, companies may not see the current corporate tax rules as stable over the longer term because Democrats are proposing to raise the corporate tax rate.

Trade was broadly neutral in the third quarter, as net exports subtracted a mild 0.08 percentage point from the quarter’s 1.9 % GDP growth rate.

The pace of exports picked up to a 0.7% annual rate after a decline in the second quarter, while the rate of imports rose by a greater amount, a 1.2% rate, as Americans stepped up purchases of foreign goods.

After stripping out the volatile categories of trade, inventories and government spending, sales to private domestic purchasers rose at an annual rate of 2.0 %, down from 3.3 % in the second quarter.

Total government expenditures were up at a 2.0 % annual rate in the third quarter.

A measure of overall inflation suggested underlying inflation pressures remained relatively subdued by historical standards. The price index for personal-consumption expenditures increased at a 1.5 % pace in the third quarter. Core prices—which exclude food and energy—rose at a 2.2 % rate.

www.wsj.com