Las Vegas Review-Journal

US constructi­on spending static in July, but declines reverse

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nonresiden­tial projects which rose to an all-time high of $429.5 billion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate. Office building and shopping centers both showed solid gains.

Residentia­l constructi­on increased 0.3 percent in July but spending on government projects fell 3.1 percent, the fourth drop in the past five months.

Overall constructi­on spending stood at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $1.15 trillion in July, up a modest 1.5 percent from a year ago.

Residentia­l constructi­on, which had fallen for three straight months, rebounded slightly in July on the strength of increased spending on home remodeling projects. Spending on single-family home constructi­on was down 0.2 percent while spending on apartment constructi­on dropped 0.6 percent. Total home constructi­on was up 1.9 percent from a year ago.

Nonresiden­tial constructi­on has been up sharply in four of the past five months with July activity 7.1 percent higher than a year ago. In addition to solid gains in office and shopping center work, there were also strong increases in manufactur­ing and power plant constructi­on. But spending on constructi­on of hotels and motels was down 1.2 percent.

The decline in government spending reflected a 3.3 percent fall in spending at the federal level and a 3.1 percent drop in state and local constructi­on activity.

The overall economy grew at a modest 1.1 percent annual rate in the spring after an even weaker 0.8 percent gain in the first quarter. But economists expect growth will rebound to close to 3 percent in the current July-September quarter, helped by stronger constructi­on activity.

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