Construction spending during January 2023 was estimated at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of $1,825.7 billion, 0.1% (±0.7%)* below the revised
December estimate of $1,827.5 billion (originally $1,809.8 billion); expectations
were for +0.2%. The January figure is 5.7% (±1.2%) above the January 2022 SAAR
of $1,726.6 billion; the not-seasonally adjusted YoY comparison (shown in the
table below) is +5.0%.
* 90% confidence interval includes zero. The U.S. Census Bureau does not have sufficient statistical evidence to conclude that the actual change is different from zero.
Private Construction
Spending
on private construction was at a SAAR of $1,442.6 billion, virtually unchanged
from (±0.5%)* the revised December estimate of $1,442.0 billion (originally $1,427.1
billion):
- Residential. $847.4 billion, -0.6% (±1.3%)* of which
- Home improvement. $351.4 billion, +0.5% (+15.3% YoY);
- Nonresidential. $595.2 billion, +0.9% (±0.5%).
Public Construction
Public
construction spending was $383.1 billion, 0.6% (±1.2%)* below the revised
December estimate of $385.5 billion (originally $382.7 billion):
- Educational. $84.1 billion, -0.6% (±2.0%)*
- Highway. $117.3 billion, 0.9% (±2.8%)*.
Click
here for a
discussion of January’s new residential permits, starts and completions, and here for a
discussion of new and existing home sales, inventories and prices.
The foregoing comments represent the
general economic views and analysis of
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