US Construction Spending Unexpectedly Falls

 | Jun 03, 2016 06:18AM ET

The U.S. Census Bureau reports that construction spending fell 1.8% in April compared to the previous month. It rose 4.5% compared to April 2015. Construction spending in the first four months of 2016 is still 8.7% higher than for the same period one year ago.

Commercial construction spending fell 3.7% to $72.0 billion, but remains 6.8% above April of 2015. Educational construction spending was down 2.4% to $88.4 billion, still 5.4% greater than April a year ago. Manufacturing construction dropped 1.4% to $76.3 billion, 9.8% below April, 2015.

h2 Labor Still in Demand/h2

Our Construction MMI for June was no outlier, falling 9.6% to 66 from 73 in May. As we noted in May, a lack of skilled labor continues to plague U.S. construction. Overall job creation was up 2% in the U.S. between March and April, but it was up 4.7% for the construction industry and 2.5% for the architectural and engineering services sector. Those are healthy increases, but many projects still need skilled laborers who are in short supply and, despite increasing spending and decent demand for new homes and commercial construction, many projects are idled while waiting for crews.