Tuesday, September 24, 2024
  • IAPMO R&T Lab - Leaderboard
  • Canadian Concrete Expo 2025 - Leaderboard
  • NIBS - Digital Twins 2024
  • Procore Leaderboard 2024
  • Revizto - Leaderboard - September and October 2024
  • Dentec - Leaderboard - 2023 - Updated
  • CWRE 2024
  • Premier Construction Software - Leaderboard New - Sept 5
  • Sage Leaderboard
  • Keith Walking Floor - Leaderboard - Sept 2021
August 2, 2019

U.S. construction spending posts biggest drop in seven months

As reported in the Financial Post, U.S. construction spending fell by the most in seven month in June as investment in private construction projects tumbled to a more than 1-1/2-year low.

The Commerce Department said on Thursday construction spending dropped 1.3%, the biggest decline since last November. Data for May was revised up to show construction outlays falling 0.5% instead of decreasing 0.8% as previously reported.

Advertise YOUR business on Construction Links Network – Download the media kit

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast construction spending rising 0.3% in June. Construction spending fell 2.1% on a year-on-year basis in June.

Spending on private construction projects dropped 0.4% in June to $962.9 billion, the lowest level since October 2017. That followed a 0.3% decline in the prior month. Investment in private residential projects fell 0.5% in June after being unchanged in May.

Homebuilding has remained weak even as mortgage rates have dropped sharply from last year’s high levels. Spending on residential construction has contracted for six straight quarters, the longest such stretch since the Great Recession.

Spending on private nonresidential structures, which includes manufacturing and power plants, fell 0.3% in June after decreasing 0.6% in the prior month. Private nonresidential investment has now declined for three straight months.

Investment in nonresidential construction fell at its steepest pace in more than three years in the second quarter, helping to hold back economic growth to a 2.1% annualized rate. The economy grew at a 3.1% pace in the first quarter.

Keep reading in the Financial Post