Construction Spending Unexpectedly Declines One Percent

by Mish

Construction spending fell a sharp 1.0 percent in January but the weakness is in public spending, not residential spending where gains are substantial. Spending on new single-family homes rose 1.1 percent in the month with multi-family spending up 2.2 percent. Year-on-year, single-family spending continues to improve with a 2.3 percent gain while the multi-family category remains very strong at 9.0 percent.

Now the weakness in the report. Public spending posted wide declines including the Federal component, down 7.4 percent in the month, and the state & local component, down 4.8 percent. Totals on educational buildings and highways & streets were all weak.

Private spending on nonresidential building was unchanged in the month with gains for power and manufacturing offsetting declines for transportation, office buildings as well as commercial construction.

But public spending looks to get a boost down the road with new fiscal initiatives while the strength of the report, residential investment, is very solid and looks to improve further given gains in related permits. The housing sector has gotten off to a bumpy start this year though this report is one of strength.

Report is a Joke

The construction spending report is a joke. Massive revisions are the norm, sometimes dating back a decade. Even recent reports have been heavily revised.It does not portend anything at all.

The report does not portend anything at all.

Econoday notes “The housing sector has gotten off to a bumpy start this year though this report is one of strength.

Econoday is correct about the bumpy start for housing. Thus, the report is not a sign of strength; it’s a sign of more construction report nonsense nearly guaranteed to be massively revised at a later date.

New Home Sales Reports

  1. January 26, 2017: New Home Sales Plunge 10.4 Percent: In Search of Good News
  2. February 24, 2017: New Home Sales Rise Half of Economists’ Expectations, Supply Surges

New home sales occur at closing, construction occurs soon after. If we don’t have a jump in sales, there will not be a jump in single-family housing construction unless builders are suddenly building on speculation.

Mike “Mish” Shedlock

Subscribe to MishTalk Email Alerts.

Subscribers get an email alert of each post as they happen. Read the ones you like and you can unsubscribe at any time.

This post originated on MishTalk.Com

Thanks for Tuning In!

Mish

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Stay Informed

Subscribe to MishTalk

You will receive all messages from this feed and they will be delivered by email.