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U.S. Industry Snapshot - April’s Nonresidential °µÍø½ûÇøion Starts -5.9% M/M & -16.8% Ytd

Alex Carrick
U.S. Industry Snapshot - April’s Nonresidential °µÍø½ûÇøion Starts -5.9% M/M & -16.8% Ytd

°µÍø½ûÇøConnect announced today that April 2021’s volume of construction starts, excluding residential work, was $31.5 billion, a decrease of -5.9% versus March 2021’s $33.4 billion (originally reported as $32.2 billion). The m/m pullback was entirely due to softness in nonresidential building starts, -23.4%, as heavy engineering/civil starts were +25.3%.

U.S. Industry Snapshot - April’s Nonresidential °µÍø½ûÇøion Starts -5.9% M/M & -16.8% Ytd Graphic

Click here to read the complete April 2021 Industry Snapshot article, Ìý– below is a short excerpt.

Year-to-date nonresidential starts through the fourth month of this year were -16.8% versus Jan-Apr 2020. Nonresidential building and engineering year-to-date performances have been -24.6% and -3.5% respectively.

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Perhaps in a sign of what’s to come, with Washington’s greater emphasis on carbon-free energy generation, two of the three largest (by dollar volume) initiations in the latest month were wind power projects, at approximately half a billion dollars each, located in Missouri and Texas (seeÌý).

Including residential activity,Ìýgrand total startsÌýin April were +4.8% month to month and a barely negative -1.8% year to date. Residential work on its own was quite strong, +17.4% m/m and +21.6% ytd.

From now (i.e., April 2021 statistics) through the remainder of this year, it will be important to keep in mind that an extraordinary effect will be distorting year-over-year comparisons. Through Q1 of last year, groundbreakings were ‘normal.’ They weren’t being impacted by economy-wide shutdowns to combat coronavirus infections.

Therefore, early 2021 relative to early 2020 percentage changes have been skewed downwards by a high base (denominator) in the mathematical calculation. Moving forward, an opposite bias will come into play. Last year’s comparison numbers from late Spring on suffered from COVID-19-induced suppression.Ìý

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Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for °µÍø½ûÇøConnect. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the U.S., Canadian and world construction outlooks. Mr. Carrick has been with the company since 1985. Links to his numerous articles are featured on Twitter , which has 50,000 followers.


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