Business World

Missing piece of global economic growth jigsaw may be falling into place

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HONG KONG — A missing piece in the global growth jigsaw appears to be falling into place. Spurred by higher profits and buoyant stock markets, some of the world’s best known companies from Amazon.com Inc. to Volkswagen AG are ramping up spending on new plants and equipment after years of caution. For an internatio­nal economic expansion already gathering speed, that could prove a boon.

The thinking is that capital investment, or capex, will stoke not just demand, but ultimately higher wages and inflation. That’s a positive for central banks and government­s yearning to see profits trickle into workers’ pockets. Employers have been reluctant to spend even amid an economic upswing spanning 75% of the globe.

“Capex is definitely picking up,” said Chetan Ahya, co- head of global economics at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. “This is a very important part of the global growth story.”

A new tracker of business spending by economists at JPMorgan Chase & Co. underpins such confidence. It points to capex growth running at a pace of around 8%.

While the picture varies from country to country, there’s enough evidence that spending is improving. US orders for business investment, for example, increased by more than expected in September and the economy’s 3% spurt of the third quarter was aided by a 1.5% climb in business fixed investment.

“The pickup in business investment is like a fountain of youth for an aging recovery,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at Leuthold Group LLC in Minneapoli­s. “US companies have an incredible amount of dry powder right now.”

GREEN SHOOTS

For investors, the “green shoots” of greater business spending should prompt a better performanc­e from US industrial stocks and higher yields on 10-year Treasury notes, analysts at Pavilion Global Markets told clients in a recent report.

Amazon is spreading its internatio­nal reach with operations in India, Australia and Latin America. It also has invited US states and local government­s to submit proposals for a new headquarte­rs that will cost $5 billion and create 50,000 jobs over the next 15 to 17 years.

It’s not just the big names. The Pavilion analysts calculate capital spending by smaller US companies in the Russell 2000 index rose 33% this year through Wednesday.

“Small business owners are definitely spending more on equipment,” said Mark Vitner, senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina. “This marks a real change and partly reflects the improved regulatory environmen­t, which is seeing less new regulation coming on line.”

In Japan, core machinery orders, which are a leading indicator for future capex, rose in both July and August from a month earlier, after dropping in April through June. Auto giant Mitsubishi Motor Corp. plans to boost annual research expenses by 50% to 133 billion yen ($1.2 billion) in three years, while others including Toshiba Corp. and Toyota Motor Corp. are also spending. In the euro area, a September survey of 600 companies by UBS Group AG found capex set to jump for the first time in two years. Volkswagen is investing €1.4 billion ($1.6 billion) in new technology for commercial vehicles including electric drive trains and autonomous systems.

Meantime, China’s industrial profits jumped the most since 2011, underscori­ng the resilience of the world’s second-biggest economy. Electric vehicles are tipped to drive an investment surge.

“There are signs of a synchroniz­ed recovery of capex spending in major economies, which may provide a further boost to global trade,” China Internatio­nal Capital Corp. Chief Economist Hong Liang wrote in a note Monday. — Bloomberg

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