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Construction Spending Falls 0.6 Percent in June

Indicating that the nation’s builders continue to struggle in the current economic environment, construction spending—which includes both nonresidential and residential sectors—was down 0.6 percent in June, according to the August 1 Construction Spending report by the U.S. Census Bureau. However, spending was 3.3 percent higher than one year ago, reports the Associated Builders & Contractors.

Nonresidential construction spending fell 1 percent in June and declined 4 percent during the past 12 months, with spending totaling $545.8 billion on a seasonally adjusted, annualized basis.

“Nonresidential construction spending momentum remains subdued,” said Associated Builders and Contractors Chief Economist Anirban Basu. “The nation has now entered its fifth year of economic recovery and second quarter gross domestic product estimates released this week were better than anticipated.”

Spending was down in both the private and public sectors in June. Private nonresidential construction slipped 0.9 percent, while public nonresidential construction spending decreased 1.1 percent for the month. On a year-over-year basis, private nonresidential construction is up 1.4 percent. Public nonresidential construction spending has dipped 9.3 percent during the past year, with the rate of decline accelerating in recent months.

Ten of 16 construction sectors posted spending losses for the month, with the largest decreases in conservation and development, down 9.4 percent; religious, down 6.8 percent; water supply, down 5.5 percent; sewage and waste disposal, down 5.3 percent; and commercial, down 5.1 percent. On a year-over-year basis, construction spending has softened in 12 subsectors. The largest losses occurred in conservation and development, down 17.2 percent; communication, down 13.8 percent; educational, down 12.6 percent; highway and street, down 12.4 percent; and religious, down 12.2 percent.

Only six of the 16 nonresidential construction sectors posted spending increases in June: power, up 3.6 percent; communication, up 2.5 percent; transportation, up 1.9 percent; health care, up 1 percent; office, up 0.8 percent; and amusement and recreation, up 0.4 percent. Four subsectors have experienced higher spending compared to one year ago, including lodging, up 22.7 percent; water supply, up 6.8 percent; power, up 5.7 percent; and transportation, up 4.3 percent.  Residential construction spending slipped 0.1 percent for the month, but is 17.6 percent higher than the same time last year.

 Analysis

“Nonresidential construction and most of its sub-components are associated with stagnant spending or worse,” said ABC Chief Economist Basu. “A majority of nonresidential segments experienced declining activity in June, which often represents a period of accelerating, not decelerating, activity.

“This would not be as problematic were the declines in spending relegated to publicly financed segments,” said Basu. “Given sequestration and constrained state and local government capital budgets, declines in publicly financed construction are not particularly surprising.

“However, the recent bankruptcy of Detroit will likely translate into conservative budgeting during the months ahead as financiers and policymakers adopt an even more cautious stance regarding major capital outlays,” Basu said.

“Construction segments heavily financed by the private sector, including commercial and lodging-related construction, were down for the month, and office-related construction spending was up only slightly,” said Basu. “The implication is that the pace of economic growth, which averaged less than 2 percent on an annualized basis during the first half of 2013, has not been enough to trigger or sustain meaningful private nonresidential construction increases.

“The conventional wisdom is that the second half of the year will be better for the broader economy, which would imply better nonresidential construction performance in 2014,” Basu said. “However, with interest rates now rising, there are reasons for contractors and other stakeholders to remain cautious.”  Read More.

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