Nonresidential Spending Falls Again in December

by Jonathan McGaha | 31 January 2016 12:00 am

Nonresidential construction spending dipped for a second consecutive month, falling 0.4 percent on a monthly basis in December, according to analysis of U.S. Census Bureau[1] data released today by Associated Builders and Contractors[2] (ABC). Nonresidential construction spending totaled $681.2 billion on a seasonally adjusted, annualized basis. November’s nonresidential construction spending estimate was revised lower by 0.6 percent to
$683.7 billion.

For a second consecutive month, 12 of 16 nonresidential subsectors experienced spending decreases on a monthly basis. Private nonresidential spending dipped 2.1 percent for the month, while public sector spending expanded 2.2 percent.

“December’s estimate is a bit unnerving not only because it represents a second consecutive month of spending decline, but also because unusually warm temperatures should have helped to translate into better spending performance,” said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. “A number of leading indicators suggest that nonresidential construction spending performance will remain choppy moving forward, both for the broader economy and the nation’s nonresidential construction segment, including the Baltic Dry Index, the Conference Board’s Index of Leading Economic Indicators and the Architecture Billings Index.

“This is not to suggest that the nonresidential recovery will end in the near term,” said Basu. “Most firms continue to report healthy backlog and hiring remains aggressive, implying that many firms are staffing up in order to perform on forthcoming contractual opportunities. However, private credit is beginning to tighten and becoming more expensive. Consumer delinquencies are edging higher and corporate bond defaults have been climbing. Accordingly, many contractors may experience a slowdown in backlog accumulation in 2016, with the 2017-2018 economic outlook remaining decidedly murky.”

Only four of 16 nonresidential construction sectors experienced spending increases in December on a monthly basis:

Spending in 12 of the nonresidential construction subsectors fell in December on a monthly basis:

Endnotes:
  1. U.S. Census Bureau: http://www.census.gov/
  2. Associated Builders and Contractors: https://www.abc.org/

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