The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

U.S. constructi­on spending down 0.1 percent in October

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — Spending on U.S. constructi­on projection­s fell 0.1 percent in October, the third consecutiv­e monthly decline, as weakness in home building and non-residentia­l constructi­on offset a rebound in government projects.

The October decline matched a similar 0.1 percent drop in September and followed a 0.4 percent fall in August, the Commerce Department reported Monday. Constructi­on has been weak since peaking in May with declines in four of the five months since that time, reflecting in large part the challengin­g facing home builders.

Home builders have struggled all year with rising costs for lumber, land and workers. Mortgage rates are also rising, reflecting in part rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, which has boosted its benchmark rate three times this year and is expected to hike rates for a fourth time later this month.

In October, home building fell 0.5 percent, while nonresiden­tial constructi­on retreated 0.3 percent as declines in constructi­on of medical facilities and shopping centers offset a gain in office constructi­on. Government spending was up 0.8 percent in October, a rebound that reflected gains in both state and local projects and federal spending.

The National Associatio­n for Business Economics released a new economic outlook Monday in which its forecastin­g panel downgraded estimates for home constructi­on for this year and next year. It projects that builders will start constructi­on on 1.26 million homes in 2018, down from their forecast in October for 1.28 million housing starts this year.

The revised forecast would still be a 5 percent increase from the 1.2 million housing starts in 2017. For 2019, the forecast expects starts will rise to 1.3 million units, a reduction of 50,000 units from NABE's October survey.

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