(Fixed) Investment (from NIPA accounts)

Importance:

Definition: Investment spending accounts for about 14% of the GDP and covers two categories:
1. Fixed Investment that in turn is divided into:
    1.1. nonresidential investment (spending on plants and equipment)
    1.2. residential investment (single-family and multi-family homes)
2. Change in Inventories .

Fixed investment is a flow that represents the change in the stock of installed capital in the economy. It differs from the related concept of change in inventories in the GDP accounts that measure the change in the stock of unsold goods.

Related Indicators:

Source: Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis,. NIPA dataset.

Frequency: Quarterly, revised monthly. The investment for a given quarter is released together with the GDP figures  in the first month following a quarter as the "advance estimate". The "preliminary estimate" is published in the second month, followed by the "revised" estimate in the third month.

Availability: Three to four weeks following the reported quarter
 
Direction:

Timing:

Volatility:

Likely Impact on Financial Markets on:

Ability to affect markets:...
 
Analysis of the indicator:

The GDP report also includes .....
 

WEB Links

Graphs of the latest non-residential and residential investment data from The Economic Statistics Briefing Room of the White House

A table with the most recent non-residential investment data; another one with data on  residential investment and a summary table on the GDP and its components.

The latest GDP report from the BEA includes an analysis of the investment trends in the latest quarter
You can chart investment, its components and other NIPA data from the NIPA VISUALIZATION PAGE

You can see Investment charts with theEconomic Chart Dispenser

You can create customized consumption charts with the Economic Chart Maker  Tip: type "INVESTMENT" in the Label section of the form and choose the transformation of the data you are interested in.

An analysis of the latest GDP report from First Union

An Analysis of the GDP report from Morgan Stanley's Stephen Roach