Monday, January 5, 2009

"Once the boom was over, it became time to invest in the nonresidential sector again."

From EconomPic Data:

"Construction Spending November

Per Interest Rate Roundup:

The latest figures show construction spending was down, but not out, in the month of November. Total spending declined 0.6% against market expectations for a decline of 1.4%. October's decline was also revised to just -0.4% from a previously reported drop of -1.2%.

The residential market continues to be a lead anchor, with private residential spending down 4.2% -- the biggest decline since July's -6.2% reading. Private nonresidential spending, on the other hand, increased 0.7% after a 0.4% decline in October. Within the private nonresidential sector, spending on lodging was up 0.7%, spending on office property rose 0.9%, spending on transportation projects jumped 3.2% and spending on power facilities climbed 5.3%.



Looking at the longer trend (year over year rather than month over month), residential construction has gotten absolutely crushed. One area of huge growth has been manufacturing, which I have no explanation for. It looks like the media is confused as well. See if this commentary by Zacks makes any sense:
Construction in manufacturing also increased by 61.5% over the past year, as the manufacturing sector had been struggling during this economic recession, as evidenced by the ISM Manufacturing announcement on Friday, a 28 year low.


Source: Census
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Here's Casey Mulligan's explanation of the Manufacturing Construction increase, which makes sense to me:

"Flashback: Nonresidential Investment Boom

I have consistently explained (eg., here and here) how the housing boom was diverting resources away from nonresidential investment. Once the boom was over, it became time to invest in the nonresidential sector again. ( I AGREE )

I was told that the latter couldn't happen, because banks were (supposedly) not lending.

Well, November showed yet another INCREASE in nonresidential construction spending:

"The Commerce Department reported Monday that construction spending dropped by 0.6 percent in November, less than half of the 1.3 percent decline economists expected. A 4.2 percent fall in housing construction was partially offset by a surprisingly strong 0.7 percent rise in nonresidential activity."

This was no surprise to readers of this blog!!

Construction spending is measured in dollars -- so it is an even bigger real increase (recall that investment goods prices have been falling these days).
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