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Financial News
Private Residential Construction Reaches 3 Year High in May
Updated: Tuesday, July 31, 2012 - 12:47 PM

The Census Bureau's newest release on construction spending
showed a 2.8 percent increase in spending activity for private
residential projects in May 2012. On a three-month moving average
basis, spending has increased during each of the last 8 months.
This release also featured revisions to prior estimates dating back
to January 2010. While the modest upswing in total private
residential construction activity has been preserved, multifamily
construction spending has been expanding at a slightly faster pace
than before. Overall, this marks the highest nominal level of
residential construction spending since early 2009.
New single-family construction activity expanded for the 12th time
in the last 13 months, gaining 1.8 percent versus April and nearly
15 percent from the May 2011 level of spending. Since bottoming out
during the second quarter of 2009, spending on new single-family
homes has risen more than 33 percent. Although the forecast calls
for accelerating growth in homebuilding activity over the next
several quarters, a sluggish labor market and tight lending
standards are impediments to stronger gains in construction going
forward.
As mentioned above, the revisions to historical data produced a
modestly stronger recovery for new multifamily construction
activity. Nominal spending increased 6.3 percent compared to April
and has surged more than 50 percent on a year-over-year basis. Even
with an unexpectedly weak reading in May, starts of buildings with
5+ units have averaged 211,000 on an annualized basis since the
beginning of the year and permits have averaged 235,000 over the
last 7 months. Therefore, new multifamily spending will likely
recover further over the course of 2012. Home improvement spending
improved for the second consecutive month, increasing 3.6 percent
in May, coming on the heels of a 1.5 percent rate of growth in
April. Although spending on remodeling held up better than new
multifamily and single-family during the housing market downturn,
remodeling activity has held within a generally close range since
late 2010.
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