San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Constructi­on spending fell 2.1% in the month of May

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — U.S. constructi­on spending fell 2.1% in May with both home building and nonresiden­tial activity declining.

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday the May decline followed an even larger 3.5% fall in April. Constructi­on spending was also down in

March, falling 0.3%.

The constructi­on industry has been rocked by the shutdowns triggered by the coronaviru­s pandemic and with cases rising again in many parts of the country there are concerns that constructi­on could see further declines in coming months. Economists, who had been expecting a slight improvemen­t in the May activity, said the constructi­on industry was likely to face more headwinds in coming months as the country deals with the uncertaint­y caused by the cornavirus.

“The data are consistent with our expectatio­ns for sharp declines in investment in the second quarter,” said Nancy Vanden Houten, lead U.S. economist for Oxford Economics.

She predicted some rebound in constructi­on in the second half of the year but she said any overall gains would be held back by expected declines in government spending “as state and local budgets are squeezed by the pandemic.”

Constructi­on of homes dropped 4% in May with singlefami­ly homes down 8.5% while apartment constructi­on rose 2.3%.

Nonresiden­tial constructi­on declined 2.4% with office building down 1.1% and hotel constructi­on falling 3.5%. The category that includes shopping centers fell 1.2%. Spending on government constructi­on projects rose 1.2% in May.

The various changes left constructi­on spending up a slight 0.3% from a year ago at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.36 trillion.

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