Another good sign for the U.S. economy.
The US economy grew by 3.2% in the third quarter, better than expected and initially reported, according to the second estimate of gross domestic product released Tuesday.
Economists had forecast that the value of everything produced and every service rendered during the quarter rose at a 3% annualized rate. Last month, GDP was reported at 2.9% based on incomplete data.
Consumer spending was stronger than previously estimated, and was the main reason why overall economic growth was revised higher. Personal consumption grew by 2.8%, up from 2.1% in the Commerce Department's initial estimate.
These up revisions to growth support the case for the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates at its meeting in December, and make that decision more likely.
Tuesday's report also showed more positive contributions from exports. The preliminary report showed that much of the growth recorded in Q3 came from stronger soybean exports, which surged as poor harvests in the largest South American exporting countries gave US producers a gap to fill.
This report included the first snapshot of corporate profits in the third quarter, and showed that companies earned $133.8 billion, a 6.6% increase that was up from a decrease by $12.5 billion (-0.6%) in Q2.
Companies on the benchmark S&P 500 index reported six straight quarters of declining profits through Q2, but analysts expected a return to earnings growth in the third quarter.
The Commerce Department will release a third estimate of these data on December 22 and annual revisions in 2017.