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Construction Spending Rises 0.4 Percent In November, Gains in Private Nonresidential Spending

New spending data comes as AGC also releases the industry’s predictions for construction spending trends in 2024, need for new workers and planned investments in AI and other tech.

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January 2, 2024

Construction Spending Rises 0.6 Percent In October

November 2023

Total construction spending increased by 0.4 percent in November, as a pickup in homebuilding and some private nonresidential markets offset a downturn in public spending, according to an analysis of federal spending data the Associated General Contractors of America released today. Association officials said the new spending data comes as they and Sage are getting set to release the 2024 Construction Hiring & Business Outlook this Thursday that includes the industry’s predictions for spending trends for the year.

“Private construction spending is showing renewed vigor in homebuilding and selected private nonresidential categories, while developer-financed spending languishes,” said Ken Simonson, the association’s chief economist. “Unfortunately, public construction spending appears to have stalled.”

Spending Totaled $2.050 Trillion

Construction spending, not adjusted for inflation, totaled $2.050 trillion at a seasonally adjusted annual rate in November. That figure is 0.4 percent above the upwardly revised October rate. Spending on private residential construction rose by 1.1 percent, as single-family construction climbed for the seventh-straight month, by 2.9 percent. Spending on multifamily projects edged up 0.1 percent.

Spending on private nonresidential construction rose 0.2 percent in November, the fifth consecutive monthly increase. The largest segment, manufacturing construction, climbed 0.5 percent. Among other large private categories, commercial construction—comprising warehouse, retail, and farm projects—declined 0.5 percent, while investment in power, oil, and gas projects rose 0.8 percent. Spending on offices and data centers, as well as private health care facilities, was virtually unchanged.

Public construction spending slumped 2.2 percent in November despite a minimal 0.1 percent increase in the largest category, highway and street construction. Spending on educational structures slipped 0.3 percent. Spending on transportation facilities fell 1.0 percent. Spending on other infrastructure categories tumbled even more: 1.6 percent for sewage and waste disposal, 1.4 percent for water supply, and 4.4 percent for conservation and development.

Outlook Released

Association officials said the new construction spending data was helpful for understanding what has been happening in the industry. They added, however, that the AGC Outlook released recently shows where contractors expect demand for construction to expand and to contract this year. The new Outlook also predicts whether the industry plans to add jobs and what kind of investments it will make in AI and other forms of technology.

“Understanding what has happened to the industry is important, but knowing what will happen is even more important,” said Stephen E. Sandherr, the association’s chief executive officer. “The new Outlook we will release with Sage will offer a comprehensive look into what the industry expects to happen in 2024.”

Read the original press release.

 

About AGC

AGC is the source for the construction industry’s breaking news. Issue experts are available to offer insights and analysis on a wide range of issues including economic trends, legislation affecting the construction industry, green construction, safety training and contract documents. 

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SFIA Cold-Formed Steel (CFS) Data Reports

Get Cold-Formed Steel (CFS) Data

The Steel Framing Industry Association (SFIA) offers quarterly United States industry-wide statistical reports of the volume of cold-formed steel (CFS) (in raw tons before processing) used to produce CFS products. Two reports are available:

  1. Quarterly Market Data Report, a statistical summary by region and application (structural and nonstructural products)
  2. Quarterly Nonresidential Volume Report, a statistical summary with comparative data for the nonresidential market and indicators of prevailing market sentiment

Get CFS reports at steelframing.org/market-data

 

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