New Construction Spending Dipped Slightly in September

November 1, 2016 by Paul Ausick

The U.S. Census Bureau reported Tuesday morning that construction spending in September dipped to an estimated seasonally adjusted annual rate of about $1.15 trillion, down 0.4% from the downwardly revised estimate of $1.154 trillion in August. Compared with September 2015, total spending is down 0.2%.

For the first nine months of 2016, new construction spending rose 4.4% to an estimated total of $863.2 billion, compared with the 2015 total of $826.8 billion.

The consensus estimate by economists surveyed by Bloomberg News called for a rise of 0.6% in construction spending for September and a year-over-year decline of 0.3%.

For the month of September, private residential construction rose 0.5% month over month to $453.7 billion. Private nonresidential construction fell 1% month over month, and total private construction spending on a seasonally adjusted annual basis fell 0.2% to $879.7 billion compared with a revised August total of $881.6 billion.

In the private sector, single-family residential construction is 2.9% lower than it was a year ago and multifamily construction is up 9.1% from September 2015. Private, nonresidential construction is up 4.1% year over year.

In the public sector, seasonally adjusted total spending fell 0.9% compared with August and is now 7.8% lower compared with September 2015. Spending on educational facilities decreased by 1.1% month over month, and it is down 0.4% from September 2015 spending. Public residential construction fell 9.9% month over month and remains down 14.8% compared with September 2015.

Private-company spending on new housing is up 5.8% year over year through September, and private sector spending on nonresidential construction is down 2.1% year over year. Total public and private construction spending is up 4.4% compared with September 2015.

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