Showing posts with label world's largest economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world's largest economy. Show all posts

U.S. economy picks up speed to 2.5 %

U.S. economic growth picked up speed to 2.5 percent in the third quarter of this year, reduction of recession, but experts held that the economy was confronted with a slew of domestic and international challenges.

The growth rate of the real gross domestic product (GDP) in the June-September period was the best quarterly performance since the start of this year, a welcome relief for the world's largest economy, which was on the edge of a double-dip recession for the first half of the year.

The growth speed was in line with economists' expectations and was a big acceleration from the revised 1.3 percent growth rate in the second quarter.

Katharine Abraham, a senior White House economist, said "We are, nonetheless, at a fragile moment in the world economy, and cannot afford to do anything to undermine our economic recovery," on Thursday in a White House blog article.



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Fed's low rates pledge supports global stocks

low rate stocks

A pledge by the Federal Reserve to keep extremely small interest rates for another couple of years has calmed investors' jitters, sending stock markets approximately the world higher Wednesday, The Fed's surprise announcement Tuesday that it would likely stay its Fed funds rate at near zero percent through 2013 to help the ailing U.S. economy help Wall Street surge late in the session — the Dow Jones industrial average rallied 6 percent just in the last hour of trading, one of the biggest turnarounds ever seen.

That continued into the Asian and European trading sessions, even though traders remained nervous after the market turmoil of recent weeks, which has sent several global markets officially into bear market territory — falling 20 percent from recent peaks, "There is an consequence of technical rebound but it is too early to say that the crisis is in excess of, or that's the end of the crash," said Olivier de La Ferriere, a fund manager at KBL Richelieu in Paris.

Wall Street was poised to give up a few of Tuesday's late gains — Dow futures were down 0.6 percent at 11,123 even as the broader Standard & Poor's 500 futures fell an equivalent rate to 1,165.Worries over the U.S. economic recovery include been building over the past couple of weeks ever since the government revealed so as to the world's largest economy has been growing far more weakly in the initial half of 2011 than economists expected.

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