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TL:DR
WASHINGTON, Aug 1 (Reuters) - U.S. construction spending dropped further in June amid a sharp decline in outlays on single-family housing projects because of higher mortgage rates and rising inventory.
The Commerce Department's Census Bureau said on Friday that construction spending fell 0.4% after a revised 0.4% decrease in May. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast construction spending unchanged after a previously reported 0.3% drop in May. Spending fell 2.9% on a year-over-year basis in June.
Spending on private construction projects slipped 0.5%. Investment in residential construction decreased 0.7%, with outlays on new single-family housing projects plunging 1.8%.
Government data this week showed residential investment contracted in the second quarter at its fastest pace since the fourth quarter of 2022. Mortgage rates have remained elevated as tariffs on imported goods have raised economic uncertainty, prompting the Federal Reserve to pause its interest rate-cutting cycle. New housing inventory is at levels last seen in late 2007.
Outlays on multi-family housing units were unchanged in June. Investment in private non-residential structures like offices and factories fell 0.3%. Spending on nonresidential structures contracted in the April-June quarter for the second straight quarter. Spending on public construction projects edged up 0.1%. State and local government construction spending increased 0.5%, while outlays on federal government projects dropped 4.4%.

My Thoughts 💭

This numbers are putrid! Even the government put is starting to lose steam with low levels of growth. Housing supply will be in a rut for quite some time. But people are just waiting for rates to fall and all that equity will be unleashed which I think will make home prices sticky and tough to drop.
518 sats \ 1 reply \ @optimism 5 Aug
I was looking at office construction spending earlier - the total is up 17% since 2022, the mix is radically changing though:
There's still some construction growth to be found... but only for SkyNet.
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Hahaha SkyNet
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I think the Feds are looking to divest from existing properties more than building new. Depends on agency, though.
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