Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Constructi­on emerges from six-month slump

- ANNA WISE wdp@reachplc.com

UTHE UK’s constructi­on industry returned to growth last month after a six-month slump which saw housebuild­ing suffer against a property market downturn.

The latest S&P Global constructi­on purchasing managers’ index (PMI) scored 50.2 in March, up from 49.7 in February and the highest level since August last year.

Any reading above 50 indicates that overall output in the sector has expanded.

Although only fractional, the positive score marks a shift for builders have grappled with tougher economic conditions, including rising prices, weaker demand and disruption in their supply chains.

Civil engineerin­g was the bestperfor­ming sub-sector in March, with firms saying they were doing more work on infrastruc­ture projects and there was resilient demand in the energy sector.

While housebuild­ing and commercial constructi­on activity was broadly unchanged, the stabilisin­g of residentia­l work reflected the best performanc­e in more than a year.

It indicates that there could be early signs of recovery after a downturn in the housing market, driven by higher interest rates pushing up mortgage costs and the greater cost of living.

Rob Wood, chief UK economist for Pantheon Macroecono­mics, suggested that the expectatio­n that interest rates will soon be cut has been a “tonic” for constructi­on firms.

“Improving real wages and expected interest rate cuts are proving to be the right medicine to end the constructi­on downturn, with all major sectors of the industry now showing flat or marginally rising output,” he said.

He added that the PMI survey suggests constructi­on activity will continue to improve.

Tim Moore, economics director for S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce, agreed that the firms surveyed pointed to a rebound in opportunit­ies for work “helped by easing borrowing costs and signs that UK economic conditions have started to recover in the first quarter of 2024”.

But he added that staff hiring was a “weak spot” as companies had lingering concerns about cost pressures and a sense of hesitancy among their customers to commit to projects.

Staff numbers fell last month, albeit at a slower pace than in February. Builders remain upbeat about their prospects for business activity in the year ahead, but political uncertaint­y, squeezed margins and financial pressures continued to weigh on optimism.

 ?? Gareth Fuller/PA wire ?? The UK’s constructi­on industry returned to growth last month after a six-month slump which saw housebuild­ing suffer against a property market downturn
Gareth Fuller/PA wire The UK’s constructi­on industry returned to growth last month after a six-month slump which saw housebuild­ing suffer against a property market downturn

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