The Scotsman

Building firms upbeat despite disruption

- Scott Reid scotsman.com

British constructi­on companies remain optimistic despite experienci­ng the first hike in building costs since last autumn as Red Sea disruption pushes shipping prices higher.

The latest closely-monitored S&P Global/cips purchasing managers' index (PMI) for the constructi­on sector revealed that overall input costs rose last month for the first time since September and at the fastest pace since May last year.

Some firms flagged higher costs for imported building materials due to the Red Sea attacks on ships, according to S&P Global. The warning comes as clothing and home retailers and supermarke­ts have warned over delays to imported stock and higher costs as ships are being forced to reroute away from the region.

Despite the cost pressures, the PMI survey showed that UK constructi­on businesses were the most optimistic in two years on hopes that interest rates have peaked and the worst of the downturn is behind them. The report recorded a better-thanexpect­ed headline reading of 48.8 for January, up from 46.8 in December and the highest reading since August last year.

The PMI came as new research from housebuild­er Redrow revealed that 66 per cent of young women already work in, have considered working in or are open to working in constructi­on, up 17 per cents from last year. The survey of 1,000 young adults found that it’s not just the potential high salary young women find appealing (39 per cent), but also the opportunit­y to have a long-term career (26 per cent) and the ability to set up their own business later down the line (25 per cent).

Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce, which compiled the survey, said: “UK constructi­on companies seem increasing­ly optimistic that the worst could be behind them soon as recession risks fade and interest rate cuts appear close on the horizon. The prospect of looser financial conditions and an improving economic backdrop meant that business activity expectatio­ns strengthen­ed to the highest for two years in January.”

He added: “Housebuild­ing remained by far the weakest-performing category, despite the rate of decline easing to its slowest since March 2023.”

Economic think-tank the EY Item Club said the latest constructi­on PMI added to signs of a “promising start” to 2024. Martin Beck, the organisati­on’s chief economic advisor, said: “The EY Item Club thinks there are good reasons to take a more upbeat view of constructi­on’s prospects. The speed and scale of interest rate rises has tightened credit conditions, increased debt costs and investment hurdle rates.

“This has weighed on economic growth, as well as demand for property. But this now looks set to ease much sooner and faster than had been expected only a few months ago.”

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