Business World

Building materials wholesale price growth up 5.4% in Nov.

- Ana Olivia A. Tirona

WHOLESALE PRICE growth of building materials in the National Capital Region (NCR) hit a nearly three-year high in November, the Philippine Statistics Authority said.

The Constructi­on Materials Wholesale Price Index (CMWPI) for Metro Manila grew 5.4% year on year in November, against 4.7% print in October and 0.8% in November 2020.

It was the highest growth rate since December 2018, when the CMWPI rose 5.7%.

The index reflects large purchases by major constructi­on companies and property developers, and serves as a leading indicator for future activity by those industries.

In the year to date, growth in the Metro Manila CMWPI averaged 3.0%, against the year-earlier expansion of 1.3%.

November growth was led by the prices of fuels and lubricants, which accelerate­d to 38.3% year on year from 33.3% in October; concrete products and cement (3.0% from 1.2%); plumbing fixtures and accessorie­s/waterworks (1.8% from 1.1%); plywood (2.6% from 2.1%); reinforcin­g and structural steel (8.8% from 8.4%); electrical works (7.2% from 6.9%); sand and gravel (3.0% from 2.7%); and doors, jambs and steel casements (2.5% from 2.3%).

Year-on-year price growth slowed down in hardware (2.6% from 2.8%); lumber (2.8% from 3.1%); and tileworks (minus 1.8% from minus 0.1%).

“Primary factors... would have been the looser restrictio­ns due to lower infections before the 2021 holidays and the general perception that it was now safer to go out, supporting more demand particular­ly constructi­on-related products and services,” UnionBank of the Philippine­s, Inc. Chief Economist Ruben Carlo O. Asuncion said in an e-mail.

“The reduced restrictio­ns (allowed builders) to buy and push through with constructi­on plans. This may also be true not only for retail sales, but more so for wholesale ones involving bigger constructi­on projects,” Mr. Asuncion added.

Metro Manila and its surroundin­g areas were under general community quarantine (GCQ) Alert Level 3 between Nov. 1 and 15. The GCQ was eased to alert level 2 between Nov. 15 and 30, during which the coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) Omicron variant was first detected.

Mr. Asuncion expects CMWPI growth in December to be higher, then slowing down in January.

“(T)his will be short-lived and may unfreeze come February especially if the government eventually shifts to Alert Level 2 (from Alert Level 3) with the decline of the Omicron surge in the NCR,” Mr. Asuncion added. —

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