U.S. Census Bureau Data Analysis for November Shows Decrease in Price of Construction Materials

Press Release Summary:

Associated Builders and Contractor Analysis of U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data for November reports a monthly decline. The data shows 1.7 percent decrease in the price of nonresidential construction inputs for the month. According to the analysis there is a 15 percent increase in the prices of natural gases when compared to October month. The prices of materials are 5.3 percent more on the basis of year-over-year and the price of construction materials fell by 1.8 percent in November.


Original Press Release:

Price of Construction Materials Declines in November; ABC Predicts Moderate Increases in Early 2019

WASHINGTON, Dec. 11—Construction materials prices fell 1.8 percent in November, according to Associated Builders and Contractors’ analysis of U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data released today. Despite the monthly decline, materials prices are still 5.3 percent higher than they were on a year-over-year basis.

Nonresidential construction input prices fell 1.7 percent for the month and are up 5.8 percent compared to the same time last year. Prices declined in five of 11 subcategories, with crude petroleum (down 29.5 percent) and unprocessed energy materials (down 11.5 percent) experiencing the largest decreases. Only natural gas recorded a substantial increase in price: up 15 percent from October.

“In general, contractors should find today’s report to be packed with positive data,” said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. “Earlier in 2018, materials prices were racing skyward due to a combination of strong domestic demand, a synchronized global economic recovery, pervasive increases in asset prices, and tariffs imposed on steel, softwood lumber and other inputs. 

“Yet circumstances have changed materially,” said Basu. “The global economy has weakened in intervening months, which implies that demand for key productive inputs is no longer expanding rapidly. Rather than consistently rising, various asset prices have exhibited mores volatility. Given growing economic and financial uncertainty around the world, more investors have crowded into U.S. dollar-denominated assets as safe havens, pushing the value of the greenback higher, which also can suppress materials price increases. Moreover, the quantity of domestic production of certain key inputs appears to have risen in the context of higher prices earlier this year, including oil, softwood lumber and steel.

“The impact of expanding domestic production can be observed in the data,” said Basu. “For instance, steel mill product prices are up nearly 19.8 percent compared to a year ago but rose just 0.5 percent in November. Softwood lumber prices, which increased sharply earlier this year, are now down nearly 11 percent compared to last year and fell 3 percent in November. With the global economy expected to continue to weaken and the dollar expected to remain strong, contractors should expect only moderate increases in materials prices during the early months of 2019, though further declines in input prices are certainly possible.”

Visit ABC Construction Economics for the Construction Backlog Indicator, Construction Confidence Index and state unemployment reports, plus analysis of spending, employment, GDP and the Producer Price Index.

Associated Builders and Contractors is a national construction industry trade association established in 1950 that represents more than 21,000 members. Founded on the merit shop philosophy, ABC and its 70 chapters help members develop people, win work and deliver that work safely, ethically and profitably for the betterment of the communities in which ABC and its members work. Visit us at abc.org.

Contact:
Rachel O'Grady, ABC, (202) 905-2104, ogrady@abc.org.

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