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Friday, April 26, 2024

Construction Spending Revision Fiasco

Courtesy of Mish.

Construction spending rose 0.3%, less than the Bloomberg Econoday consensus estimate of 0.5%.

However, Last month was revised up from -0.5% to +1.0%.

Ready to cheer? Not so fast. January was revised from +2.1% to -0.3%.

Highlights

Home sales may be puttering along but construction spending nevertheless remains one of the strongest reports on the calendar. Construction spending did inch 0.3 percent higher in March, which is lower than expected, but February is now revised sharply higher, from a 0.5 percent decline to a 1.0 percent gain. Gains for March and February are positives for near-term momentum though they are offset by a sharp downward revision in January to minus 0.3 percent from plus 2.1 percent.

Back to March, residential spending rose 1.6 percent driven by gains for multi-family homes with single-family homes flat. The latter is a disappointment but does follow a trend of steady strength in prior reports.

Non-residential spending rose 0.7 percent in March led by transportation and including a respectable gain for manufacturing, one that may hint at better results for capital spending. Public spending on educational building and on highways is also up though Federal spending remains weak and state & local spending, which has been strong, fell in the month.

Year-on-year, total construction spending is up 8.0 percent, which includes a 7.8 percent gain on the residential side and a 9.3 percent gain on the non-residential side. These are down from 10 percent rates in prior reports but are still very hard to match anywhere else in the economy.

Recent History

Construction spending is expected to rise 0.5 percent in March to offset a 0.5 percent decline in February, one that masked a strong 0.9 percent gain for residential spending. Non-residential spending was the weak spot in February, falling 1.3 percent. Still, both components are posting 10 percent year-on-year growth which is far above other readings on the economy.

Construction Revisions Net Negative

  • February 1.5 percentage points up
  • January 2.4 percentage points down

Revision Fiasco

January 5, 2016: Diving Into the Revisions: Construction Spending Revised Lower 7 Consecutive Months! 2015 GDP Will Decline vs. Estimates: By How Much?

January 29, 2016: When are Construction Revisions Coming?

March 25, 2016: 4th Quarter “Final” GDP Estimate 1.4% – Expect Revisions


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