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March Construction Activity Retreats
One Percent
New construction starts in March slipped 1 percent to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of $475.2 billion, it was
reported by McGraw-Hill Construction Dodge, a division of
The McGraw-Hill Companies. Both nonresidential building and
housing fell slightly, while nonbuilding construction made
a partial rebound from a weak February.
The construction start data for March produced a 143 reading
for the Dodge Index (1996=100), compared to a revised 145
for February and 150 for January. Accordingly, the recent
trend for the Dodge Index has been downward, with the first
quarter of 2003 averaging 3 percent less than the previous
quarter. "Last year the construction industry leveled
off, and the early results for 2003 are now pointing towards
a mild loss of momentum," stated Robert A. Murray, vice
president of economic affairs for McGraw-Hill Construction
Dodge. "Single family housing has held up quite well,
thanks to low mortgage rates, but other construction sectors
have been dampened by the lackluster economy, the diminished
fiscal health of the federal and state governments, and uncertainty
related to the buildup towards war against Iraq. The quick
end to hostilities has lifted some of the uncertainty, but
it may take some time before the economy strengthens in a
sustained manner, and it will be even longer before the federal
and state governments see improvement in their fiscal positions.
In this environment, the moderate slowdown experienced by
construction during the first quarter provides a good indication
of how the year as a whole will play out."
Nonresidential building in March dropped 1 percent to $140.8
billion. After registering growth in February, the commercial
categories slipped back once again in March - stores, down
12 percent; hotels, down 16 percent; offices, down 24 percent;
and warehouses, down 36 percent.
"The commercial categories in recent months have shown
an up-and-down pattern, so the March retreat following February's
upswing is consistent with that trend," stated Murray.
"After the extended declines during 2001 and 2002, the
commercial categories now appear to be hovering at a decreased
volume, which is likely to persist for at least a few more
quarters." Although down from its February pace, hotel
construction in March did include the start of a $143 million
hotel/casino project in Las Vegas. The long-depressed manufacturing
plant category was able to report a 10 percent gain in March.
The institutional side of the nonresidential market offset
much of the March weakness for commercial building. The educational
building category grew 5 percent, supported by the start of
a $120 million bioengineering laboratory building at the University
of California, Berkeley; plus the start of an $88 million
library in Jacksonville FL. Healthcare facilities in March
climbed 23 percent, while the public building category jumped
47 percent with the push coming from the start of a $113 million
federal prison project in Arizona. Transportation terminal
work was up 96 percent, boosted by the start of a $106 million
terminal renovation at Chicago's O'Hare Airport. Two institutional
categories that lost momentum in March were churches, down
1 percent; and amusement-related projects, down 7 percent.
Residential building, at $247.5 billion, was down 2 percent
in March. The slight drop was the result of a 3 percent decrease
for single family housing combined with a 2 percent gain for
multifamily housing. The level for single family housing was
still very healthy, matching the average monthly pace reported
in 2002. "Single family housing remains very strong for
now, as the benefits of low mortgage rates continue to outweigh
the negatives of sluggish employment and weak consumer confidence,"
Murray noted. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 5.7
percent during March, compared to 7.1 percent a year ago.
By geography, residential building in March performed as follows
- the South Central, up 6 percent; the Northeast, down 1 percent;
the South Atlantic, down 3 percent; the West, down 4 percent;
and the Midwest, down 5 percent.
Nonbuilding construction in March increased 3 percent to $87.0
billion. The volume of new highway starts was especially strong,
rising 26 percent after the prior month's depressed amount.
Congress finalized fiscal 2003 appropriations in early February,
keeping funding for the federal-aid highway program within
1 percent of the previous year, and this apparently helped
highway
construction to rebound in March. Other public works categories
showing March gains were sewers, up 18 percent; and river/harbor
development work, up 33 percent. On the negative side, water
supply systems dropped 10 percent, and bridges were down 37
percent from a robust February that included the start of
a very large bridge project in the state of Washington. Electric
utility construction in March fell 8 percent, resuming this
category's descent after a brief upturn in February.
During the first three months of 2003, total construction
on an unadjusted basis was 7 percent below the same period
in 2002. Pulling total construction downward were declines
of 15 percent and 22 percent for nonresidential building and
nonbuilding construction, respectively, outweighing a 4 percent
increase for residential building. On a regional basis, total
construction in the January-March period was the following:
the West, up 6 percent; the South Central, down 3 percent;
the South Atlantic, down 8 percent; the Midwest, down 12 percent;
and the Northeast, down 27 percent.
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