The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

Rebound in the constructi­on sector slows in worst month since August

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Constructi­on companies have reported what appears to be their worst month since August as a temporary rebound for the sector slowed down.

Activity among the UK’s housebuild­ers stalled in November, and the sector as a whole only just managed to grow thanks to a stronger performanc­e for the commercial building sector.

The influentia­l S&P Global/CIPS UK Constructi­on PMI survey scored the constructi­on sector just 50.4 last month, its worst score since August.

The sector looked to be growing healthily in October with a score of 53.2 – anything above 50 is considered to show growth among constructi­on businesses.

Analysts were expecting the growth to slow down in November, but only to 52, according to an average of estimates supplied by Pantheon

Macroecono­mics. The survey score had fallen to a 26-month low of 48.9 in July.

“Stalling housebuild­ing activity contribute­d to the weakest UK constructi­on sector performanc­e for three months in November,” said Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce.

“Survey respondent­s noted that new residentia­l building projects had been curtailed in response to rising interest rates,

“Optimism fell to the same level as December 2008

cancelled sales and worries about the economic outlook.”

The businesses questioned in the widerangin­g survey reported that their costs had risen sharply in November. They said high energy prices, low supplies of key materials, and general inflation were to blame.

But cost pressures are still much lower than they have been at any point since January 2021, the survey found, as the prices of commoditie­s relaxed somewhat.

Dr John Glen, chief economist at the Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t & Supply (CIPS) said: “The small uplift in activity in November did little to dispel builders’ fears about the future as optimism fell to the same level as December 2008 during the last recession and to one of the same lows seen during the pandemic.”

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