Construction spending during May 2023 was estimated at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of $1,925.6 billion, 0.9% (±0.5%) above the revised
April estimate of $1,909.0 billion (originally $1,885.0 billion); expectations
were for +0.5%. The May figure is 2.4% (±1.2%) above the May 2022 SAAR of
$1,880.9 billion; the not-seasonally adjusted YoY comparison (shown in the
table below) is also +2.4%.
During the first five months of this year, construction spending amounted to $740.8 billion, 2.9% (±1.0%) above the $719.6 billion for the same period in 2022.
Private Construction
Spending
on private construction was at a SAAR of $1,513.2 billion, 1.1% (±0.3%) above
the revised April estimate of $1,497.2 billion (originally $1,500.7 billion):
- Residential. $857.4 billion, +2.2% (±1.3%) of which
- Home improvement. $358.4 billion, +3.4% (-1.8% YoY);
- Nonresidential. $655.8 billion, -0.3% (±0.3%)*.
Public Construction
Public
construction spending was $412.4 billion, 0.1% (±1.0%)* above the revised April
estimate of $411.8 billion (originally $407.7 billion):
- Educational. $87.7 billion, virtually unchanged (±1.5%)*;
- Highway. $124.6 billion, -0.4% (±2.8%)*.
* 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.
Click
here for a
discussion of May’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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