Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

U.S. GDP Surges 4.3% In Q3, A Stronger-Than-Expected Summer Finish


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Real GDP rose at a 4.3% annualized pace in Q3 2025, beating forecasts and topping Q2's 3.8% gain.
  • Households drove the expansion, with trade and government spending adding lift; corporate profits jumped.
  • Inflation in the report stayed under 3%, but it was not“zero,” keeping the Fed path and the dollar in play.

The United States delivered a strong growth print for the third quarter of 2025, with gross domestic product expanding at a 4.3% annualized rate, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said.

The figure exceeded the roughly 3.3% consensus expectation and marked faster momentum than the prior quarter. The composition was largely encouraging.

Consumer spending, the core of U.S. demand, rose at a 3.5% rate and contributed the biggest share of the overall increase. Services led, including health care and international travel, alongside steadier goods demand.

Net exports provided a sizable boost as exports surged and imports fell, and government spending added a smaller but positive contribution.



BEA's release also carried a profit signal that markets notice. Corporate profits from current production rose by $166.1 billion in the quarter, after a much smaller increase in Q2, implying firmer earnings power heading into the year's final stretch.

Supporters of President Donald Trump have argued the number validates his economic approach. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had recently said he expected the U.S. to finish 2025 around 3% real growth, even after disruption from a federal government shutdown.

On its face, a 4.3% quarterly rate is stronger than that yardstick. The price index for personal consumption expenditures rose at a 2.8% annual rate in Q3, with core PCE inflation at 2.9%.

Those readings are far below the inflation peaks of earlier years, yet still above the Federal Reserve's 2% target but the trajectory is good.

The release itself was unusual. BEA said the October–November shutdown delayed key source data and altered the normal GDP schedule, increasing the importance of revisions. The next update related to this Q3 estimate is scheduled for January 22, 2026.

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The Rio Times

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