The BEA’s advance estimate shows U.S. GDP grew at a 2.0% annualized pace in the first quarter, a clear step up from last quarter’s 0.5% pace. The standout driver was heavy business spending tied to artificial intelligence—investment in computers, software, and R&D contributed a large chunk of growth. Households kept spending but at a softer clip, while construction pulled back and equipment and intellectual property surged.
First-quarter growth accelerating to 2.0% came as a surprise to some, but the data make the source of that strength obvious. Corporations poured money into AI-related hardware and software, and that capital spending alone punched well above its weight. When firms invest to modernize and automate, output gets a near-term lift and potential productivity improvements follow.
Business investment was the real engine: private investment jumped nearly 9% annualized, and equipment spending exploded. Computer gear was the headline, with year-over-year-like gains that are the kind of lopsided numbers you only see during tech waves. Intellectual property also climbed strongly, with software and R&D spending moving sharply higher as firms race to build AI capabilities.
Consumers still mattered, but their role changed a bit. Personal consumption contributed a solid share of the increase, but the pace slowed compared with the prior quarter, with spending on goods dipping. Services remained the bigger slice of the economy and still expanded, though the healthcare component accounted for a meaningful portion of that gain.
Digging into categories, spending on durable goods was steady while nondurables slipped, and motor vehicles rebounded after a big drop last quarter. Restaurants and hotels softened a touch, turning in a performance that was slightly weaker than in the final quarter of last year. These patterns underline a split between big-ticket business bets and more cautious household behavior.
The construction sector painted a different picture, dragging rather than lifting GDP. Both residential and nonresidential construction fell, reflecting ongoing adjustment in housing and commercial projects. That decline acted as a counterweight to the strength elsewhere, reminding us growth is not broad-based across every corner of the economy.
From a market perspective, the mix matters: heavy corporate investment into AI-capable machines and software gives a concrete rationale for equity gains. Investors are rewarding firms that appear set to boost long-term productivity, not just short-term sales. When capital spending meaningfully strengthens the supply side, it reduces the mystery around why risk assets are holding up in choppy times.
There are practical implications beyond headlines: large outlays on computers and software tend to lift demand for specialized chips, cloud services, and enterprise software upgrades. That ripples through suppliers and service providers and can create pockets of rapid growth even while other sectors lag. Policymakers and business leaders watching labor markets and productivity measures will want to see whether these investments translate into higher output per worker down the road.
The composition of GDP also matters for inflation and policy. When growth is propelled by supply-side investments rather than overheating consumer demand, the inflationary picture can differ. Central bankers will parse whether this uptick reflects temporary spending patterns or a more durable shift toward higher productivity that eases price pressures over time.
Looking ahead, the big question is whether this wave of AI-related capital spending keeps pace and spreads beyond a handful of sectors. If firms continue to buy advanced equipment and pour money into software and R&D, the economy could gain a steadier, more productivity-driven growth path. If the surge proves short-lived, the near-term GDP boost may fade, leaving the broader recovery to depend on consumer resilience and other investment channels.
