News and Announcements

US GDP growth slows to 0.5pc in Q4

By Iain Gilbert

Date: Thursday 09 Apr 2026

(Sharecast News) - US economic growth slowed sharply at the end of 2025, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis' third estimate, with real GDP rising at an annualised 0.5% rate in the fourth quarter, compared to a 4.4% expansion in the third quarter.
The BEA's latest estimate marked a 0.2‑percentage‑point downward revision from the prior reading, reflecting weaker investment and a even sharper decline from an advance estimate that had previously put GDP growth at 1.4%.

Growth in consumer spending, which makes up more than two‑thirds of the US economy, was revised slightly lower to a 1.9% annualised pace in the fourth quarter, down from the previously reported 2%, while final sales to private domestic purchasers, which strips out government, trade and inventories, rose at a 1.8% clip.

The average of GDP and gross domestic income, known as gross domestic output and viewed by some economists as a broader gauge of activity, increased at a 1.5% pace in Q4, compared to a 4% expansion in Q3.

Real GDP increased 2.1% for 2025 as a whole, the same as previously estimated.

By industry, private services output rose 2.3%, while government output dropped 7.8% and private goods‑producing industries contracted 1.8%. Wholesale trade, information, and health care and social assistance were the largest contributors to growth.





Reporting by Iain Gilbert at Sharecast.com

Article Archive

Free Membership To Digital Look

Discover the full range of Investor's Tools and Services from Digital Look - voted 'Best Research & Information Provider 2007' by Investors Chronicle.

Click here to see what you have free access to.

Top of Page