(Bloomberg) -- Optimism among chief executive officers of large U.S. companies rose to the highest in almost six years, as the outlook for capital spending improved, a Business Roundtable survey showed Tuesday. Hiring plans eased as wages became the top cost pressure.
Highlights of CEO Economic Outlook (4Q) |
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Key Takeaways
The latest quarterly report on the Washington-based group’s index extends a run of strong readings since Donald Trump was elected president last year, with his administration and congressional Republicans supporting an agenda of deregulation. Trump and GOP lawmakers are moving to enact a tax-cut plan that aims to spur growth to 3 percent annually, though many analysts expect any economic boost to be modest.
While sales expectations improved in the survey, the gain in the capital spending subindex reflects an increase in respondents who expect no change in U.S. investment and fewer CEOs projecting a decline. In addition, the share who expect their company’s U.S. employment to decline in the next six months rose to 18 percent from 13 percent, while the proportion projecting an increase held at 43 percent.
Official’s Views
“The U.S. economy is strong, and business leaders are increasingly confident in continued economic growth,” confidence that “rests on the pro-growth economic agenda of policy makers,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon -- who serves as chairman of the Business Roundtable -- said in a statement. “To continue this momentum, it is critical that we enact pro-growth tax reform that will level the playing field for U.S. business to be globally competitive.”
Other Details
- CEOs project U.S. economic growth of 2.5 percent for 2018; 3Q survey showed 2.1 percent forecast for 2017
- In an annual special question about greatest cost pressure facing their company, 31 percent said labor; 26 percent said regulatory; 15 percent said materials; 13 percent said health care
- The survey, with responses from 150 member CEOs, was conducted between Nov. 2 and Nov. 17
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