Construction spending had been a highlight of the U.S. economy but less
so with November's report where the headline fell 0.4 percent, far below
the Econoday consensus for plus 0.7 percent. The year-on-year gain for
spending, at 10.5 percent, is the lowest since April last year. Today's
report also includes sharp downward revisions to prior months, the
result of a processing error going back to January last year. October's
initial 1.0 percent monthly gain is now cut 7 tenths to 0.3 percent
while September is now at plus 0.2 percent vs an initial plus 0.6
percent.
The processing error, unfortunately for the housing
outlook, is centered in the residential component where prior strength
has been cut back. Still, residential spending rose 0.3 percent for a
second month in a row that follows September's very solid 1.2 percent
gain. Spending on new single-family homes has been rising strongly with
the year-on-year rate at a very solid plus 9.3 percent. Spending on
multi-family homes did fall in November but has been in fact booming in
prior months, up 24.5 percent year-on-year.
Spending on
nonresidential construction has also been solid, down in November but
with the year-on-year rate at plus 13.6 percent. Public spending has
been led by the educational component, up 15.2 percent year-on-year,
with highway spending behind at plus 5.6 percent.
A processing
error of this size is rare for government data but even after the
downward revisions, construction spending remains a central plus and a
reminder that domestic demand is the economy's most important driver.
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