The Arizona Republic

US constructi­on spending falls in July

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — U.S. constructi­on spending fell in July from June by the largest amount in a year, weighed down by a big drop in spending on home improvemen­t projects.

But spending on constructi­on of single-family homes and apartments increased again, a hopeful sign for the modest housing recovery.

The Commerce Department said Tuesday that overall constructi­on spending declined 0.9 percent in July. It followed three months of gains, which were driven by increases in home and apartment constructi­on.

The June decline left spending at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $834.4 billion. That’s nearly 12 percent above a 12-year low hit in February 2011. Constructi­on activity is roughly half of what economists consider to be healthy.

“In short, a weaker than expected report,” said Jim O’Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics. Still, O’Sullivan noted that the data are volatile and the trend in residentia­l spending “is clearly still upward.”

Spending on residentia­l constructi­on fell 1.6 percent in July from June to a seasonally adjusted annual level of $264.6 billion. But that was dragged lower by a 5.5 percent decline in home improvemen­t projects.

Spending on single-family homes rose 1.5 percent, the fourth straight monthly gain. And spending on apartment constructi­on was up 2.8 percent, the ninth straight gain.

Separately, CoreLogic, a private real estate data provider, said U.S. home prices jumped 3.8 percent in the 12 months ending in July. The year-overyear increase was the biggest in six years and the third national measure of home prices to show steady gains.

Rising prices and higher home sales have made builders more confident in the housing market. A survey of builder sentiment rose in August to its highest level since the housing market went bust five years ago. The gains in housing have been fueled by record low levels for mortgage rates. The average rate for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage has been below 4 percent all year. Still, the constructi­on industry remains weak.

Spending on nonresiden­tial projects fell 0.9 percent to an annual level of $294.1 billion. Spending on government projects dropped 0.4 percent to a level of $275.7 billion. Spending on state and local building projects fell 0.3 percent, while spending on federal constructi­on projects was down 1.3 percent.

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