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April Construction Holds Steady
At a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $477.0 billion,
new construction starts in April were essentially unchanged
from March, according to McGraw-Hill Construction Dodge, a
division of The McGraw-Hill Companies. Nonresidential building
rebounded after decreased activity during the previous two
months, but housing and public works posted moderate declines.
April's data kept the Dodge Index at 144 (1996=100), unchanged
from the revised reading for March. The Dodge Index began
the year at 151, but then slipped back to 144 in February,
and held at this reduced level over the next two months. For
2002 as a whole, the Dodge Index had averaged 151. "It's
true that the construction industry lost momentum during the
early months of 2003, but so far the retreat can be characterized
as a measured pullback," stated Robert A. Murray, vice
president of economic affairs for McGraw-Hill Construction
Dodge. "April's stability is a good sign that the slowdown
will continue to be mild, helped by an offsetting pattern
by sector.
Public works is experiencing some dampening from tighter fiscal
conditions, but commercial building is now showing more of
an up-and-down pattern, following its extended decline of
the prior two years. Whether this up-and-down pattern can
turn into a more sustained upward trend will depend upon how
much strengthening the economy is able to show over the next
couple of quarters."
Nonresidential building in April advanced 7 percent to $150.5
billion. Although store construction slipped back 2 percent,
April witnessed generally stronger activity for commercial
building.
Warehouses jumped 26 percent after a very weak March, while
office construction increased 22 percent, helped by the start
of a $141 million federal office building in San Francisco
and a $110 million office building in Chicago. Murray stated,
"It's true that the volume of office construction is
down substantially from three years ago, but on the positive
side the weakening trend has become less severe, and there's
now an occasional monthly gain, such as April." Hotel
construction was up 11 percent compared to March, boosted
by the start of a $155 million hotel/casino project in Las
Vegas.
The institutional building categories in April generally
showed improvement. School construction edged up 1 percent,
while healthcare facilities surged 25 percent from a weak
March, buoyed by the start of several segments of a large
medical center in Los Angeles, totaling $445 million. The
amusement category bounced back 27 percent from a weak March,
and transportation terminal work was also up 4 percent. However,
reduced contracting was reported for public buildings (courthouses
and detention facilities), down 6 percent; and churches, down
11 percent. The manufacturing plant category in April also
experienced reduced contracting, slipping 5 percent.
Residential building, at $243.1 billion, was down 3 percent
in April. Single family housing showed a 2 percent decline
in dollar volume, while the drop for multifamily housing was
a larger 9 percent.
Although down slightly in April, single family housing remains
at a high level, with contracting during the first four months
of 2003 up 2 percent over the same period a year ago. Low
mortgage rates continue to support the demand for single family
homes - the 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 5.8 percent
in April, and subsequently fell to 5.3 percent during May.
Over the past couple of years, multifamily housing has been
basically stable, but higher rental vacancy rates are generating
some concern about the near term prospects for apartment construction.
By geography, residential building in April showed this pattern
- the Midwest, unchanged; the South Central, down 2 percent;
the South Atlantic, down 3 percent; the Northeast, down 5
percent; and the West, down 5 percent.
Nonbuilding construction in April retreated 3 percent to
$83.3 billion. The public works categories registered mostly
declines - water supply systems, down 5 percent; river/harbor
development, down 9 percent; highways, down 16 percent; and
sewers, down 19 percent. Bridge construction, up 26 percent,
ran counter to the broader April weakening, helped by the
start of a $139 million project in Maryland, an $89 million
project in New York, and a $55 million project in Kentucky.
Murray noted, "Public works advanced 5 percent in 2002,
but the tighter fiscal environment, especially for state governments,
is beginning to dampen the volume of construction for this
sector during 2003." Electric utility construction in
April surged 42 percent, in a departure from its more general
downward trend, reflecting the start of a $438 million power
plant in Alabama.
During the first four months of 2003, total construction
on an unadjusted basis was down 5 percent from a year ago.
Residential building advanced 5 percent, but nonresidential
building was down 11 percent and nonbuilding construction
was down 21 percent. On a regional basis, total construction
during the January-April period of 2003 showed this performance
compared to 2002 - the West, up 9 percent; the South Central,
up 2 percent; the South Atlantic, down 5 percent; the Midwest,
down 11 percent; and the Northeast, down 28 percent.
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