Market Expects Growth to Remain Moderate: Strategist

Last week, the Commerce Department reported that gross domestic product rose 2.6 percent during the fourth quarter, which bested expectations of 2.2 percent by a Dow Jones survey of economists.

The higher GDP comes after a 3.4 percent rise in the third quarter. A tumultuous fourth quarter for U.S. equities may have caused economists to believe that a lesser GDP figure would result.

A 2.8 percent rise in consumer spending helped to boost the better-than-expected GDP. Other factors included increased nonresidential fixed investment, exports, private inventory investment, and federal government spending.

“The deceleration in real GDP growth in the fourth quarter reflected decelerations in private inventory investment, PCE, and federal government spending and a downturn in state and local government spending,” the Bureau of Economic Aanalysis wrote in a statement. “These movements were partly offset by an upturn in exports and an acceleration in nonresidential fixed investment. Imports increased less in the fourth quarter than in the third quarter.”

In the video below, R.J. Gallo, senior portfolio manager and head of the municipal bond investment group at Federated Investors, and David Lebovitz, global market strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management, join “Squawk Box” to discuss the broader markets.

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