The
US economy grew much faster in the third quarter than first reported, official
figures have shown.
It
expanded at an annualised rate of 3.9% between July and September, up from the
3.5% first estimated by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.
The
rise, which follows a strong second quarter, means the US has seen its
strongest two consecutive quarters of growth for a decade.
Consumer
spending was the biggest driver of the raised estimate.
It
grew by 2.2% according to the latest estimate, which was higher than the
initial calculation of 1.8%.
Consumer
spending is closely watched as it accounts fo
r 70% of US gross domestic product
(GDP).
Moving on
The
data suggests the US has shrugged off the slow start to the year when heavy
snow saw the economy shrink.
"The
question of whether the economy is accelerating or will accelerate is no longer
a question; we can say somewhat definitively that the economy has already
accelerated," said Dan Greenhaus, chief strategist at BTIG.
Meanwhile,
a separate survey, showed US house prices rose by more than expected in
September.
The
closely-watched S&P/Case Shiller index jumped 4.9% year-on-year.
The
index, which measures single-family home prices in 20 cities, showed that
prices were up 0.3% month-on-month on a seasonally adjusted basis.
"With
the economy looking better than a year ago, the housing outlook for 2015 is
stable to slightly better," said David Blitzer, chairman of the index
committee at S&P Dow Jones Indices.
March rate rise?
Capital
Economics economist Paul Dales said the strong GDP upgrade underlined his
expectation that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates as soon as
March next year.
"Most
people were expecting a downward revision so this was a real surprise," he
added.
At
the end of October, the US Federal Reserve said it would not raise interest
rates for a "considerable time".
It
also ended its quantitative easing (QE) stimulus programme of buying financial
assets and creating new money to pay for them, aimed at stimulating the
economy.
However,
it said it was confident the US economic recovery would continue, despite a
global economic slowdown.
BBC
Business
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