Khaleej Times

US CEO confidence surges the most since 2009

- Shobhana Chandra

— Optimism among chief executive officers of some of the largest US companies jumped in the first quarter by the most since the economy was emerging from the last recession, as the outlook for sales, the labor market and investment brightened considerab­ly.

The Business Roundtable’s CEO Economic Outlook Index — a measure of expectatio­ns for revenue, capital spending and employment — jumped 19.1 points to 93.3, according to the group’s survey. The increase, the biggest since the final three months of 2009, left the gauge above its long-run average of 79.8 for the first time in seven quarters. Readings above 50 indicate economic expansion.

The survey is yet another in a series of confidence measures that have shown sizeable upswings among businesses and consumers following Donald Trump’s victory in the November presidenti­al election. While companies have said they’re encouraged by his plans to cut corporate taxes, reduce regulation­s and invest in infrastruc­ture, the real test for the economy is whether they follow through with more capital spending and hiring.

“I am enthusiast­ic about the opportunit­y to enact a meaningful pro-growth agenda that will benefit all Americans,” Jamie Dimon, chairman of Business Roundtable and CEO of JPMorgan Chase & Co, said in a statement. “As these results confirm, business confidence and optimism have increased dramatical­ly.”

The survey, with responses from 141 member CEOs, was conducted from February 8 to March 1. In response to a special question, 52 per cent of the participan­ts said tax reform would be the single-best policy change to create the most pro-growth environmen­t for businesses. Corporate leaders project the economy will expand 2.2 per cent in 2017, up from their December estimate of two per cent.

Dimon said on a conference call that if the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates into a strong environmen­t, that is more important than rates going up 25 basis points.

“The economy seems to be OK and may be getting a little bit stronger,” while other indicators such as inflation are moving into the Fed’s target range, Dimon said on the call. If policy makers are raising rates, “it’s probably a sign of strength, not a sign of weakness.”

The Business Roundtable’s measure of the sales outlook for the next six months climbed 21 points to a five-year high of 123.8 in the first quarter. A gauge reflecting plans for capital spending advanced 18.4 points to an almost three-year high. An index of hiring expectatio­ns surged 18 points, the most in seven years.

The Washington-based Business Roundtable represents companies with more than $6 trillion in annual revenue and about 15 million employees.

 ?? Bloomberg ?? The real test for the US economy is whether firms follow through with more capital spending and hiring. —
Bloomberg The real test for the US economy is whether firms follow through with more capital spending and hiring. —

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