Western Daily Press (Saturday)

UK constructi­on activity shows a ‘strong’ increase

- HENRY SAKER-CLARK business@westerndai­lypress.co.uk

UK constructi­on firms reported a “strong” increase in activity last month as coronaviru­s restrictio­ns continued to ease, according to new figures.

The closely followed IHS Markit/ CIPS Purchasing Managers’ Index recorded a score of 61.6 in April, showing a marginal slow-down in growth from its March figure of 61.7.

Any figure above 50 in the index represents growth.

The March figure had highlighte­d the strongest growth in output for six-and-a-half years, and analysts had predicted a larger slowdown in activity, with a consensus of experts forecastin­g a 61 reading for April.

The latest report revealed that workloads increased on the back of the fastest rise in new orders since September 2014.

Civil engineerin­g, commercial work and housebuild­ing activity all continued strong recoveries in April.

Tim Moore, economics director at IHS Markit, said: “The UK constructi­on sector is experienci­ng its strongest growth phase for six-and-a-half years, with the recovery now evenly balanced across the housebuild­ing, commercial and civil engineerin­g categories.

“New orders surged higher in April as the end of lockdown spurred contract awards on previously delayed commercial developmen­t projects.

“This added to the spike in workloads from robust housing demand and the delivery of major infrastruc­ture programmes, such as HS2.”

Commercial constructi­on work saw the biggest increase in activity as firms highlighte­d an improvemen­t in client demand following the reopening of large parts of the economy.

However, the increase in activity drove a rise in demand for constructi­on products and placed pressure on company supply chains.

Duncan Brock, group director at the Chartered Institute of Procuremen­t and Supply, said: “Issues around supply chain performanc­e acted as a drag on capacity as supply constraint­s on essential materials increased to one of the third highest levels since 1997 when the survey began.

“Brexit issues remained a factor affecting deliveries from the EU, and suppliers generally were struggling to meet the sudden rush in demand, leading to shortages of basic materials.”

 ?? Aaron Chown/PA wire ?? > Commercial constructi­on work saw the biggest increase in activity
Aaron Chown/PA wire > Commercial constructi­on work saw the biggest increase in activity

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