MW The U.S. economy is growing surprisingly fast - and here's the surprising reason why
By Jeffry Bartash
Business investment emerges from 2-year slump as artificial-intelligence boom spreads
Artificial intelligence and technologies related to it are driving stronger-than-expected growth in the U.S. economy.
The numbers: Rising business investment is the surprise star of the five-year-old U.S. economic expansion - and it doesn't look ready to slow down.
A key gauge of investment rose in December for the sixth month in a row, reflecting a frenzied effort by companies to adopt new technologies such as artificial intelligence as means to improve productivity and profits.
So-called core orders for durable goods climbed 0.6% in December, capping off the biggest annual increase in business investment in three years.
The increase in these orders - which omit transportation and defense - have helped to power the ongoing economic expansion along with strong consumer spending.
Nor are businesses prepared to scale back in 2026. AI companies and their suppliers - chipmakers such as Nvidia (NVDA) - are ploughing hundreds of billions of dollars into the new-fangled technology.
All this spending is filtering down to other companies and igniting a broader increase in investment. Investment rose in the final six months of 2025 to match the longest streak in three years.
In 2025, core investment rose almost 4% and bounced back from annual declines in 2024 and 2023.
The big burst in investment has taken place despite high U.S. tariffs put in place by the Trump administration that many economists thought would dampen spending in 2025. The tariffs appeared to slow investment in the middle of the year, but spending has since rebounded robustly.
Key details: The investment figures were included in the government's monthly report on durable goods. These are products meant to last a long time, such as cars, computers and tools.
Orders for durable goods fell 1.4 % in the month, but the decline was exaggerated by fewer Boeing $(BA)$ contracts for passenger planes.
These orders are lumpy from month to month and the planes take a few years to fulfill, so its best to strip out planes and the large auto sector to get a better sense of underlying business investment patterns.
Orders minus transportation rose almost 1% in December, marking the ninth increase in a row.
The durable-goods report for December was reported later than usual due to delayed caused by the government shutdown last fall.
Big picture: Companies are convinced AI and other emerging technologies can reshape and improve how their do business: How they are organized, how many people they employ, how they produce goods and services.
All of that spending is primed to help the U.S. economy expand for a fifth straight year at an above-average rate of growth. Fourth-quarter and full-year 2025 results for gross domestic product are due on Friday.
Looking ahead: "The bottom line is that after the AI boom sustained the business spending category of GDP in the first three quarters of the year, firms outside of the tech space began to re-engage late last year, setting the stage for a noticeable pickup in investment outlays in 2026," chief U.S. economist Stephen Stanley of Santander Capital Markets wrote in a note to clients.
"This has been and continues to be my main justification for expecting an above-consensus economic performance in 2026."
Market reaction: The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA and S&P 500 SPX were set to rise in Tuesday trading.
-Jeffry Bartash
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February 18, 2026 09:21 ET (14:21 GMT)
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