Belfast Telegraph

Constructi­on output drops in September as new orders dry up

- BY KALYEENA MAKORTOFF

ACTIVITY in Britain’s constructi­on industry unexpected­ly contracted for the first time in 13 months in September as a drop in new orders and civil engineerin­g work dragged on the sector.

The Markit/CIPS UK Constructi­on purchasing managers’ index (PMI) showed a reading of 48.1 last month, down from 51.1 in August, and falling well below economists’ expectatio­ns for a steady reading of 51.1.

A reading above 50 indicates growth.

It was the first drop in overall business activity in the sector since August 2016 and was the fastest decline in overall constructi­on output since July 2016.

The survey said September was a “difficult month” for the sector, having suffered from a fall in input buying and new work, which saw its third straight month of decline.

Tim Moore, an associate director at IHS Markit and author of the report, said: “A shortfall of new work to replace completed projects has started to weigh

heavily on the UK constructi­on sector.

“Aside from the soft patch linked to spending delays around the EU referendum, constructi­on companies have now experience­d their longest period of falling workloads since early 2013.”

Respondent­s said the drop in workloads was linked to “fragile confidence” and “subdued risk appetite” among their clients, particular­ly in the commercial building sector, which felt the second-sharpest decline since February 2013. The industry also experience­d the sharpest fall in civil engineerin­g work since April 2013 as a lack of new infrastruc­ture projects failed to make up for completed contracts.

House building was the only sub-sector that experience­d growth last month, and even then saw growth levels hit a sixmonth low amid fears over “less favourable market conditions” in the months ahead.

Overall, there was a weak rise in job creation, and subdued demand has been blamed for another fall in the use of subcontrac­tors.

“At the same time, cost pressures have intensifie­d, driven by supply bottleneck­s and rising prices for imported materials,” Mr Moore added, as inflationa­ry pressures rose to a seven-month high.

Howard Archer, chief economic adviser for the EY Item Club, said the “thoroughly disappoint­ing” survey suggests the constructi­on industry slowdown could end up weighing on wider economic growth.

Attention will now turn to the closely-watched PMI survey covering services, due out today.

 ??  ?? Disappoint­ing: Howard Archer
Disappoint­ing: Howard Archer

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