U.S. Construction Outlook: Rosy With A Chance Of Volatility

 | Nov 12, 2012 04:31PM ET

Our friends over at Reed Construction Data recently put forth a very comprehensive and well-articulated US residential and non-residential construction forecast.

Here are some high points:

The Fiscal Cliff: We Won’t Fall Off
Bernard Markstein, Reed’s chief economist, said he expects there to be an extension of current law for three to four months while US legislators work out the problem. [The fiscal cliff] will create unnecessary uncertainty for US businesses, but I don’t think we’ll fall off of it -- they’ll ultimately work things out, he said.

Residential, Commercial, Institutional
Between 1.1 and 1.4 million new net households were being created per year pre-recession, according to Kermit Baker, chief economist for the American Institute of Architects and, it turns out, originator of the Architecture Billings Index (ABI); then they dropped precipitously to around 600,000 per year. We may now actually reach 1 million new net household formations this year:

The residential sector is healthiest because single-family homes are moving forward, but the good news is the non-residential sector entered the construction downturn in better shape fundamentally, so its recovery could be even easier. There are encouraging signs on the commercial/industrial front, Baker said.