1 / 25

Construction & Materials Outlook

Construction & Materials Outlook. Carolinas AGC BUSS Divisions Meeting Myrtle Beach , SC, July 16, 2011 Ken Simonson, Chief Economist AGC of America simonsonk@agc.org. Current economic influences on construction. 2. Source: AGC. GDP, personal income, jobs: weak gains should improve

Download Presentation

Construction & Materials Outlook

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Construction & Materials Outlook Carolinas AGC BUSS Divisions Meeting Myrtle Beach, SC, July 16, 2011 Ken Simonson, Chief Economist AGC of America simonsonk@agc.org

  2. Current economic influences on construction 2 • Source: AGC GDP, personal income, jobs: weak gains should improve Continuing problems for office, retail State/local spending: infrastructure not a priority Federal spending helped but will decline soon Recent price spikes for diesel, metals, plastics, rubber

  3. Federal funding sources and outlook 3 • Source: AGC Stimulus: 61 programs, totaling $135 billion; at peak now Base realignment: at peak now, due to end 9/30/11 Gulf Coast hurricane work: was due to end 6/1/11 Highway, airways trust funds: on short-term extension Water, wastewaster state revolving funds: flat or down

  4. Construction-related stimulus funding (~$135 bil.) $49 billion up to $35 billion $30 billion $21 billion 4 • Source: AGC

  5. Construction spending: trend, latest level, 12-mo. changeSeasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR), March 2006-May 2011 • ▬ Total construction • May 2011: $753 billion • May 2010-May 2011: -7% • ▬Public: $276 billion, -9% • ▬Private nonres: $248 billion, -5% • ▬Private residential: $229 billion, -7% 5 • Source: Census Bureau construction spending reports

  6. Single- vs. multi-family, 2008-11, seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) Single-family & improvements spending ▬SF(1-mo 0%, 12-mo -12%), ▬Imp(1-mo -4%, 12-mo -1%) Latest 1-mo. change: -2%, 12-mo.: -7% Multi-family permits & starts Single-family permits & starts ▬Permits (1-mo 25%, 12-mo 41%) ▬Starts (1-mo 3%, 12-mo 18%) ▬Permits (1-mo 3%, 12-mo -7%) ▬Starts (1-mo 4%, 12-mo -9%) • Source: Census Bureau construction spending, housing starts reports

  7. Housing outlook 7 • Source: Author • SF: starts, permits should rise gradually by late ’11 • MF: Upturn has begun, should accelerate in ’11 • Rental demand should rise as more people get jobs or move to military base realignment sites • Condo market continues to have large overhang • Government-subsidized market likely to worsen

  8. Nonres totals (billion $, SAAR), share & 12-month change 8 • Source: Census Bureau construction spending report

  9. Construction spending: public works (billion $, SAAR) Latest 1-mo. change: -1.5%, 12-mo.: -11% Latest 1-mo. change: 3.6%, 12-mo.: -9% Latest 1-mo. change:-1.9%, 12-mo.: -16% Latest 1-mo. change: -0.3%, 12-mo.: -13% • Source: Census Bureau construction spending reports

  10. Construction spending: institutional (private + state/local) Latest 1-mo. change: 1.9%, 12-mo.: -2% Latest 1-mo. change: 3.2%, 12-mo.: -3% Latest 1-mo. change: 1.3%, 12-mo.: -9% Latest 1-mo. change: 2.3%, 12-mo.: -15% • Source: Census Bureau construction spending reports

  11. Construction spending: industrial, heavy (billion $, SAAR) Latest 1-mo. change: 3.6%, 12-mo.: 10% Latest 1-mo. change: 1.9%, 12-mo.: -19% Latest 1-mo. change: -2.6%, 12-mo.: -6% Latest 1-mo. change: 1.3%, 12-mo.: -12% • Source: Census Bureau construction spending reports

  12. Construction spending: developer-financed (billion $, SAAR) Latest 1-mo. change: 0.3%, 12-mo.: -8% Latest 1-mo. change: 1.3%, 12-mo.: -12% Latest 1-mo. change: 5.2%, 12-mo.: -4% Latest 1-mo. change: 1.5%, 12-mo.: -29% • Source: Census Bureau construction spending reports

  13. Economic impact of nonresidential construction • Source: Prof. Stephen Fuller, George Mason University • Jobs: 28,500 per $1 billion • 1/3 direct, onsite construction • 1/6 indirect (quarries, mfg., services) • 1/2 “induced” by spending from higher earnings of construction, indirect workers and owners • GDP: $3.4 billion • Personal earnings: $1.1 billion

  14. Construction and total private employment, 2008-June 2011 Latest 1-mo. change: 0.0%, 12-mo.: 1.6% Latest 1-mo. change: -0.2%, 12-mo.: 0.0% Latest 1-mo. change: -0.2%, 12-mo.: 2.8% • Source: Census Bureau construction spending reports

  15. State construction employment change (U.S.: 0%) 5/10 to 5/11 (seasonally adjusted) -10% or worse -5.0% to -9.9% -0.5% to -4.9% 0% to 4.9% 5% or better -2% NH-4% -6% -4% 1% -6% 3% 2% 5% VT -8% -6% -2% -2% 1% MA1% 0% -11% 0% 0% -3% 3% 1% 3% 2% CT0% RI-10% -8% -4% 2% 0% 4% -6% DE1% NJ-2% -1% -5% -7% 3% 4% 4% -6% MD -5% DC4% -4% -9% -2% -1% 1% -4% -4% 15 • Source: BLS state and regional employment report HI4%

  16. Construction employment change from year agoSeasonally adjusted (SA) U.S. 0% North Carolina -4.5% 39 out of 51 16 • Source: BLS

  17. 17 • Source: BLS

  18. Employment change by metro (not seasonally adjusted) 18 • Source: AGC rankings, calculated from BLS state and area employment reports

  19. Construction employment, wages, costs and output prices Unemployment rates, June 2008-June 2011 Producer price index for construction inputs not seasonally adjusted, █ construction █ total 12-mo. % change, 2008-May 2011 (5/10-5/11: 7.5%) Employment cost index for construction PPI for construction inputs, finished buildings 4-quarter % change, 2008-1Q 2011 (1Q10-1Q11: 0.6%) 12-mo. % change, May 2010-May 2011 • Source: BLS employment, employment cost index, producer price index (PPI)

  20. Construction materials costs vs. new offices, highways, CPI PPI for materials CPI March 2009=100 PPI for offices NHCCI 2009 2010 ‘11 • Source: Author, based on Bureau of Labor Statistics (consumer & producer price indexes--monthly), Federal Highway Administration (National Highway Construction Cost Index--quarterly)

  21. Producer price indexes for key inputs, 1/08-5/11 (January 2008=100) Metal products No. 2 diesel fuel Latest 1-mo. change: -3.2%, 12-mo.: 40% Highway materials Building materials • Source: Author, based on BLS producer price index reports

  22. Outlook for materials 22 • Source: Author • Industry depends on specific materials that: • are in demand worldwide • have erratic supply growth • are heavy, bulky or hard to transport • Construction requires physical delivery • Thus, industry is subject to price spurts, transport bottlenecks, fuel price swings • Expect periods of 6 to 8% PPI increases

  23. Summary for 2011 23 • Source: Author Nonres spending: 0 to +5% (less stimulus; weak state-local; more warehouse, hotel, hospitals, higher ed) Res: +5 to +10% (SF up a bit, MF accelerating) Total construction spending: +3 to +7% Materials costs: +3% to +8%; +5 to +6% Dec.-Dec. Labor costs: +1.5% or less

  24. Annual projections: 2012-2016 24 • Source: Author Total construction spending: +6% to +10% Materials costs: +3% to +8% Labor costs: +2% to + 4% Bid prices: +2% to +5%

  25. AGC economic resources (email simonsonk@agc.org) 25 • The Data DIGest: weekly 1-page email (subscribe at: www.agc.org/datadigest) • PPI tables: emailed monthly • State and metro data, fact sheets • Webinars: Aug. 3—materials costs • Feedback on activity, credit, costs

More Related