UK July construction PMI 51.7 vs 48.0 expected
<ul><li>Prior 48.9</li></ul><p>UK construction activity returns to growth in July, helped by the strongest rise in commercial building since February as well as solid growth in civil engineering activity. The downside to the report is that homebuilding saw another sharp contraction on the month. Despite the optimism, new orders remain rather constrained by rising borrowing
costs. S&P Global notes that:</p><p>"July data indicated that some parts of the UK construction
sector gained momentum, notably commercial building
and civil engineering activity. This led to a renewed rise in
total construction output which, although modest, was the
fastest for five months. Survey respondents commented on
increased infrastructure work, office refurbishments, and
resilient demand for a range of commercial projects.
</p><p>"Meanwhile, another steep reduction in house building acted
as a severe constraint on construction growth. Around 35%
of the survey panel reported a decline in residential work
during July, while only 18% signalled a rise. Lower volumes
of housing activity have been recorded in each month
since December 2022, with construction companies widely
reporting subdued sales due to rising interest rates and
worries about the economic outlook.
</p><p>"Supply conditions improved considerably in July, as a
combination of weaker demand and replenished stocks
meant that delivery times shortened to the greatest extent
since 2009. As a result, input prices inflation was much
lower than seen on average in the first half of the year, but
there were still many reports from construction firms that
higher wages costs had put upward pressure on business
expenses."</p>
This article was written by Justin Low at www.forexlive.com.
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