The Data DIGest: 7.20.2010
Posted by TED Magazine
on Monday, July 19, 2010
Construction costs cool but still squeeze contractors; Reed says starts
rise
Click
here for tables of producer price indexes for construction in June 2010.
The producer price index (PPI) for finished goods fell 0.6%
in June, not seasonally adjusted (0.5%, seasonally adjusted), and rose 2.8%
compared to June 2009, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on Thursday.
The PPI for inputs to construction industries, a weighted average of prices
for materials used in all types of construction plus items consumed by contractors
(such as diesel fuel), dropped 0.9% for the month but was 4.2% higher year-over-year.
Several key materials had one-month decreases and 12-month increases: copper
and brass mill shapes, -6.6% for the month and +13% for the year; diesel fuel,
-5.9% and 16%; lumber and plywood, -4.9% and 18%; aluminum mill shapes, -3.7%
and 11.5%; steel mill products, -1.3% and 30.5%; and asphalt paving mixtures
and blocks, -0.5% and 7.4%. The PPI for concrete products shrank 0.4% and 2.1%.
The PPI for gypsum products rose 1.8% for the month and was unchanged from June
2009. General and subcontractors continue to be squeezed by falling bid prices.
PPIs for finished nonresidential buildings, which reflect labor costs, overhead
and profit as well as materials costs, were generally flat for the month but
fell year-over-year by 4.3% for new warehouses, 3.9% for offices, 2.9% for industrial
buildings and rose just 0.5% for schools. The PPIs for subcontractors’ nonresidential
building work fell compared to June 2009 by 2.0% for roofing contractors, 1.3%
for concrete contractors and 1.1% for electrical contractors, and rose 2.2%
for plumbing contractors.
Some prices
have slipped further since PPI data were gathered in mid-June. “Nucor, the
largest North American producer and fabricator of steel rebar,…notified
customers late Monday that net transaction prices of rebar, merchant bar and
structural products (angles, flats, rounds and channels) would decrease by $20
per short ton effective with shipments Tuesday, July 13, [matching a] price
reduction announced by competitor Gerdau Ameristeel on July 6,” Platts Steel
Market Daily reported on Tuesday. The national retail average price of
on-highway diesel fuel fell 2 cents per gallon this week to $2.90, down 22 cents
from the year’s high on May 10, the Energy Information Administration reported
on Monday.
The year-to-date value of nonresidential construction
starts from January through June climbed 13% from the same months of 2009, Reed
Construction Data reported on Tuesday, based on its own compilation. June starts
were 2.9% higher than in May, “a little more than the usual seasonal gain in
June….June’s heavy construction starts fell 9.1% from a very strong May, but the
year-to-date total its 16% above 2009.” Nonresidential building starts rose 11%
year-to-date.
Many state Departments of Transportation are projecting
30-50% declines in their highway construction budgets next year, officials
reported this month at regional meetings attended by AGC. Last year’s spending
for many DOTs was at record levels as a result of federal stimulus funding and
the lingering impact of bonding and other state funding initiatives since 2005.
However, with the stimulus funds having largely been spent and with state
budgets being negatively impacted by the economic downturn, many state DOTs
reported that their programs will drop significantly next year. The DOT
officials also reported that the uncertainty over federal surface transportation
authorization legislation, which is 10 months late and unlikely to be enacted
soon, will force them to focus their construction programs on maintenance and
rehabilitation contract rather than expansion projects.
“Total state
tax revenue in the first quarter of 2010 increased by 2.5% relative to a year
ago,” the Rockefeller Institute of Government (www.rockinst.org) reported on
Tuesday. “Total tax revenue declined in 33 states in the first quarter of 2010,
down from 40 states during the fourth quarter of 2009.”
Real-estate research firms reported mixed results for commercial vacancy and
rental rates in the second quarter. Office vacancies rose 0.1 percentage point
to a record-tying 18.0%, while apartment vacancies dropped 0.2 points to 7.8%
and retail vacancies fell 0.1 point to 7.6%, Robert Bach of Grubb and Ellis told
a National Association for Business Economics (www.nabe.com) webcast on
Thursday. CoStar Group (www.costar.com) reported on Wednesday, “Of the 20
largest office markets, eight posted positive net absorption so far this year,
three had little or no change and nine posted negative net absorption.
Washington, D.C. led the country with 2 million square feet of net absorption,”
followed by Denver, -1.6 million; and Minneapolis, 1.3 million. The biggest
losers were New York City, -2.8 million; Los Angeles, -2 million; and
Philadelphia, -1 million. “But even the markets experiencing negative absorption
were doing so at much reduced levels compared with last year. Importantly though
for New York, all of the negative absorption occurred in the first quarter,
while the market absorbed more than a half a million square feet in the second
quarter and as a result saw its vacancy rate decline one-tenth of a percent.
Similarly, across the country, the quarterly change in vacancy rate has been
rising at a less rapid rate and appears to have stabilized, approaching 0%
change….with building conversions and obsolescence factored in, the U.S. office
market could see overall negative inventory growth in 2011 and 2012—an
unprecedented occurrence. That means that office markets are actually shrinking.
Not only is there very little new office product being built, there likely
won't be for some time as new office construction starts are also at
historically low levels—less than 5 million square feet in each of the last
three quarters.” The Wall Street Journal reported on July 8, “Apartment
vacancies fell slightly during the second quarter, the first drop in three
years,” citing figures from Reis Inc., which found vacancies climbed in only 15
of 82 markets. Rents fell in just 10 of the 82.
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