Key Takeaways:

  1. Economic Growth Deceleration: The U.S. GDP grew at an annual rate of 2.8% in Q3 2024, down from 3.0% in Q2, reflecting a slight slowdown in economic activity.
  2. Inflation Insights: The gross domestic purchases price index rose 1.9%, while the PCE price index excluding food and energy increased by 2.1%, signaling moderated inflation.
  3. Corporate Profit Decline: Corporate profits fell by $10.2 billion in Q3, reversing the significant $132.5 billion increase recorded in Q2, with financial corporations seeing notable declines.
  4. Personal Income and Savings: Disposable personal income rose 2.3%, but revisions led to a lowered estimate, and the personal saving rate decreased to 4.3%.
  5. Economic Resilience Amid Revisions: Upward adjustments to private inventory and nonresidential fixed investment offset reductions in exports and consumer spending, showcasing mixed economic signals.

The U.S. economy expanded at an annualized rate of 2.8% in Q3 2024, slightly below the 3.0% growth recorded in Q2, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis’ second estimate. This growth aligns with the initial advance estimate but reflects revisions in key components. Positive adjustments were made to private inventory and nonresidential fixed investments, while exports and consumer spending saw downward revisions. Imports, a subtraction in GDP calculations, were also revised lower.

In nominal terms, current-dollar GDP rose by 4.7% to $29.35 trillion, a $337.6 billion increase. Inflation indicators showed the gross domestic purchases price index increasing by 1.9%, while the PCE price index remained at 1.5%. Excluding food and energy, the PCE price index rose 2.1%.

Corporate profits faced a decline of $10.2 billion after a $132.5 billion gain in Q2. Financial corporations reported a $2.6 billion decrease, and nonfinancial corporations saw moderated growth of $30.8 billion. Profits from foreign operations decreased by $38.3 billion.

Personal income grew by $175.9 billion, while disposable income rose 2.3%, though both were revised down from earlier estimates. The personal saving rate stood at 4.3%, reflecting economic caution among households.

The report highlights economic resilience but hints at challenges, including slowing investments and profit pressures.

Source: BEA.gov