Third-quarter GDP growth stronger than expected: U.S. real GDP—a measure of all goods and services produced in the U.S. economy—rose at an annualized 2.2% rate in the third quarter (see graph above). This "preliminary" reading was higher than October's "advance" estimate of 1.6%. The upward revisions to third quarter GDP were mainly the result of a downward revision in imports and stronger inventory buildup by businesses. Consumer spending—which represents 2/3 of the nation's economic activity—was also revised downward, although it was higher than in the second quarter. The biggest detractor to economic growth in the period was the housing sector's cooldown. Investment in homebuilding fell at an 18% annual rate, the greatest decrease in 15 years.
Upcoming this week: Friday's report from the BLS on November payroll employment and the November jobless rate (expected to be 4.6%) will headline this week's economic reports.
Also coming up the following week is the FOMC meeting on December 12.
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