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National Outlook
Over the Top
by Bruce Buckley
Along with the record-setting construction starts over the
past several years, industry executives kept wondering, "How
hot can this market get?"
Now they know.
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With starts hitting an estimated $672 billion in 2006, McGraw-Hill
Construction forecasts that total construction starts have
finally peaked. For the first time since 1991, the industry
is headed for a cooldown with starts forecast to drop 1 percent
to $668 billion in 2007.
Single-family homes - the sector that buoyed the market in
recent years - will largely be responsible for dragging down
total starts. A 5 percent decline in housing starts is predicted
for 2007, with single-family home starts expected to drop
from $281 billion to $268 billion and multifamily housing
starts falling from $70 billion to $66 billion.
Robert Murray, vice president of economic affairs at McGraw-Hill
Construction, said single-family housing represented roughly
38 percent of total construction starts at the beginning of
the decade and by 2005 it was up to 48 percent. With the sector
becoming such a prominent portion of the total market, any
drop was bound to have an effect.
"A decline of that magnitude will obviously impact what
we're seeing in overall level of construction activity,"
Murray said.
Although the housing market is cooling off quickly, the market
will remain relatively stable thanks to other strong building
sectors.
"Going into 2007, it's going to be the institutional
building and public works sectors that will be key to keeping
all-around activity at a good clip," Murray said.
He announced the 2007 forecast at the annual McGraw-Hill Construction
Outlook in October in Washington, D.C.
A 'Dramatic' Correction
Although a cooling of the residential market was expected,
Murray said the market is experiencing a dramatic correction.
In 2000, median home prices were roughly four times the median
income in the U.S. In 2006, that ratio climbed to 5.2, throwing
the market "out of whack," Murray said.
Faced with ebbing demand from homebuyers, developers called
for a retreat in housing starts in 2006. By the second quarter,
single-family housing was dropping faster than widely anticipated,
matching a pace on par with the market downturn of the early
1990s.
As a result, the total number of single-family homes dropped
15 percent in 2006, from 1.63 million units to 1.37 million
units.
As goes the housing market, so goes the retail market. New
homes have historically led to construction of new retail
centers. Total square footage of store construction rose 4
percent in 2005, mirroring the hot housing market.
With housing beginning to cool this year, retail starts are
estimated to drop 2 percent to 300 million sq. ft. by the
end of 2006. Big-box retailers will be among those pulling
back.
Murray noted that Wal-Mart announced in October it would cut
global expansion from 8 percent to 7 percent.
Subsequently, McGraw-Hill Construction estimated that store
construction will slide an additional 7 percent to 278 million
sq. ft. in 2007.
"Our forecast could be a touch on the optimistic side,"
Murray said. "It's virtually guaranteed that in 2007
you will have less retail construction."
Uptick in Income Properties
Despite the drop in store construction, other income properties
are expected to see a healthy uptick in activity. Although
warehouses naturally align with retail construction, dropping
vacancy rates and rising demand for updated facilities will
keep warehouses trending upward. Construction starts in the
sector should advance by 5 percent to 230 million sq. ft.,
according to the McGraw-Hill forecast.
Office buildings continue to rebound since bottoming out at
144 million sq. ft. of starts in 2003. Vacancy rates are dropping
in many parts of the country and major towers are under way
in cities such as New York and Chicago.
Overall, McGraw-Hill Construction estimated that office construction
will advance 5 percent in 2007 to 197 million sq. ft.
"The market fundamentals are strong," Murray said.
"It's conducive to more construction taking place."
Hotel construction is expected to remain on the rise in the
face of encouraging occupancy rates and revenues. In 2006,
the sector saw an estimated 72 million sq. ft. of starts,
a dramatic 48 percent gain over 2005. Murray said the sector
will continue to see gains in 2007, rising 4 percent to 75
million sq. ft. next year.
"That could be the top," he added. "At that
point, with new hotels coming online, some of those industry
fundamentals will begin to erode a bit in 2007."
Institutional buildings remain hot going into 2007, thanks
to the improved financial health of states and the passage
of several large bond measures.
Combined starts will rise from $98.8 billion in 2005 to $106.9
billion in 2006 and advance to an estimated $113.9 billion
in 2007.
Rising enrollments have created long-term demand for classroom
space, spurring a 6 percent rise in educational building starts
to 243 million sq. ft., Murray said. Meanwhile, donations
to colleges and universities hit an all-time high in 2005,
which Murray credited for spurring major campus expansions.
Although the U.S. health-care system should experience tremendous
demand from aging Baby Boomers in the coming years, health-care
construction is expected to ease back in the coming year.
The sector hit an all-time high of 107 million sq. ft. of
starts in 2005. McGraw-Hill Construction estimated that starts
leveled at 105 million sq. ft. in 2006 and forecasts suggest
it could drop to 97 million sq. ft. in 2007 - a 7 percent
decline compared from 2006.
Public Building Modest
Public building construction, fueled in part by increased
federal appropriations for courthouses, will experience a
modest rise from 33 million sq. ft. in 2006 to 35 million
sq. ft. in 2007, Murray said.
McGraw-Hill Construction also forecasted 2007 increases in
other institutional sectors, such as religious, amusement-related
and transportation terminal buildings.
With more companies looking to replace aging production facilities,
manufacturing building is expected to rise 14 percent in 2007
from $10.7 billion to $12.2 billion. Ethanol and petrochemical
work will be among the major drivers of the trend as the country
seeks increased refining capacity and additional ways to reduce
dependence on foreign oil, Murray said.
Continued growth in the pharmaceutical and biotech industries
will also lead to new manufacturing facilities in 2007.
With the federal transportation bill, SAFTEA-LU, in place,
highway and bridge construction should have a reliable stream
of funding going into 2007, rising 9 percent to $55.6 billion.
However, Murray cautioned that real growth in highway work
could be hampered by increases in materials costs.
Environmental projects should advance 2 percent in 2007 while
sitework pulls back by 2 percent, according to the forecast.
A spike in new coal-fired plants in 2006 helped the electrical
utilities sector see an estimated 65 percent jump to $11.7
billion. In light of such a boom year, the sector should settle
back 20 percent in 2007 to $9.4 billion.
Murray said that, overall, the combined construction market
is remarkably stable heading into 2007. Although the single-family
housing sector may have spoiled the party for the surging
construction market, he said the impact could have been worse.
If single-family housing was taken out of the equation, the
market would see an overall 3 percent gain in 2007.
"It's a more stable picture now," Murray added.
"We've been seeing this offsetting pattern by sector
that has created overall greater stability for construction.
In 2008, you might see a pullback in public works and institutional
building, but it might be the time then for single-family
housing to once again be a source of expansion."
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U.S. Construction Starts
(in billions)
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YTD 2005
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YTD 2006*
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YTD 2007*
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% Ch. 07/06
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Electric Utilities
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$7.1
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$11.7
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$9.4
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-20%
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Income Properties
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$137.5
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$156.6
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$155.5
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-1%
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Institutional
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$98.8
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$106.9
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$113.9
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+7%
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Manufacturing
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$9.5
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$10.7
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$12.2
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+14%
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Single-Family Housing
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$315.5
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$281.4
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$267.9
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-5%
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Total Construction
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$663.1
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$671.7
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$668
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-1%
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Source: McGraw-Hill Construction
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*projected; source: McGraw-Hill Construction
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