“The June spending gains come on top of
upward revisions to May and April totals, reinforcing the notion that
private construction is now growing consistently,” said Ken Simonson,
the association’s chief economist. “Even more encouraging, the
improvement is showing up in a wide range of residential and
nonresidential categories.”
Simonson noted that total construction
spending gained 0.4 percent for the month and 7.0 percent
year-over-year. Private nonresidential spending climbed for the fourth
consecutive month and was 14 percent higher than in June 2011.
Residential construction increased 1.3 percent for the month and 12
percent year-over-year, with new multifamily construction soaring 3.4
percent and 49 percent, respectively, and single-family homebuilding up
3.0 percent and 19 percent.
The construction economist said that
five of the 11 private nonresidential categories in the Census Bureau’s
monthly report registered double-digit percentage gains in spending from
June 2011 to June 2012: power and energy construction (including oil
and gas-related projects), 26 percent; hotels, 26 percent; manufacturing
and educational, 19 percent apiece; and transportation (mainly trucking
and rail facilities), 17 percent. There were also 7 percent
year-over-year increases in health care,
commercial (retail, warehouse and farm) and office construction.
Public construction spending appears to
have stabilized in recent months but the June 2012 total was 3.7 percent
less than a year earlier, Simonson noted. He said only two of the
Census Bureau’s 13 public categories posted year-over-year increases.
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