New York (CNN Business)The US economy grew at an annualized rate of 1.9% in the third quarter, the Commerce Department announced Wednesday.
This
is the preliminary reading of US gross domestic product, the broadest
measure of the American economy. The Commerce Department will update its
estimate twice more.
Although
the economy's growth is slowing, it remains relatively strong. However,
the third quarter marks the first time since the final quarter of 2018
in which the US economy has grown at a rate slower than 2%.
The economy was helped by growing
consumer and government spending, but the pace of growth decelerated.
Americans spent less on cars, continuing a trend that has been ongoing
for a year.
But Americans also
spent less on clothing and footwear. The Trump administration hit some
Chinese imports of clothes and shoes with tariffs during the summer.
Nevertheless,
the report beat analyst expectations. Economists polled by Refinitiv
expected growth to be as slow as 1.6% ahead of the release.
Both the GDP report and ADP private payrolls report exceeded investors' expectations ahead of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy decision
at 2 pm ET Wednesday. But neither data point "will be able to move the
needle for the Fed," wrote Todd Schoenberger, senior research analyst at
Wellington & Co. Schoenberger agrees with the majority of
investors, who expects the Fed to cut rates by another quarter
percentage point today.
Analysts and investors expect the economy to continue to slow through the end of the year and the start of 2020.
"The
current US expansion is the longest in history and while we see it
continuing through 2020, the risks of at least one-quarter of negative
growth are rising," wrote James Knightley, chief international economist
at ING.
America's manufacturing
sector has been dragged down by the weakening global economy and lower
demand, as well as a strong US dollar, Knightley added.
"Ultimately,
there is growing evidence that the slowdown is spreading to the
consumer and service sectors given the recent ISM non-manufacturing
surveys and retail sales numbers," he said.
Even
so, the US economy continues to outperform its peers like Germany and
Japan. Put into perspective, the American growth slowdown doesn't look
so bad. And with another rate cut expected from the Fed to stimulate
growth, investors should feel at ease about their US investments.
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