The New York-based Conference Board said its monthly forecast of future economic activity rose 0.3 per cent, a better reading than the 0.2 per cent drop expected by Wall Street economists surveyed by Thomson/IFR.
The index had fallen 0.9 per cent in August and 0.7 per cent in July.
'Data on hand reflect a contracting economy, but not one in free fall,' said Ken Goldstein, a labor economist at the Conference Board. 'More likely, what's going in the financial market is a stretching of the recovery process - which could take a full year to develop.'
Six of the ten indicators that make up the leading index increased in September, including the money supply and the index of consumer expectations. The negative contributors were building permits, unemployment claims, stock prices and weekly manufacturing hours. -- AP