Buyers report busy April despite housing slowdown

Grant Prior 1 year ago
Share

Construction buyers reported a rise in activity in April for a third month in a row despite the fastest fall in housing work for nearly three years.

The bellwether S&P Global/CIPS UK Construction Purchasing Managers’ Index hit 51.1 in April from 50.7 in March keeping it above the neutral 50 value.

Rising volumes of commercial work and civil engineering activity helped to offset the steepest decline in residential construction output since May 2020.

New orders received by construction companies increased for the third consecutive month in April. The rate of expansion accelerated slightly since March and remained faster than
seen on average in the second half of 2022.

Higher levels of new work were attributed to resilient client demand, especially for commercial building.

Supply chain improvements also continued in April as lead times among vendors shortened to the greatest extent for just over thirteen-and-a-half years.

A combination of improved supply and relatively subdued demand helped to alleviate cost pressures across the construction sector.

The rate of purchase price inflation was the slowest since November 2020 and broadly in line with the long-run survey average.

Tim Moore, Economics Director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, which compiles the survey said: “The construction sector stretched out its current phase of expansion to three months in April, signalling a modest rebound from the downturn seen at the turn of the year.

“Commercial building work continued to outperform, helped by stabilising domestic economic conditions and a gradual rebound in business confidence. Civil engineering activity was also a driver of construction growth during April, with rising infrastructure work contributing to the best phase of expansion in this segment since the first half of 2022.

“However, the return to growth for UK construction output appears worryingly lopsided as residential work decreased for the fifth successive month.

“Extended delays on new housing starts were reported again in April, due to a considerable headwind from elevated mortgage rates and weak demand.

“While there have been some signs of a recent stabilisation in market conditions, this has yet to feed through to construction activity. In fact, the latest reduction in residential building was the fastest since May 2020.

“On a more positive note, the latest survey illustrated a further slowdown in input price inflation across the construction sector.

“Softer cost pressures partly reflected a sustained improvement in supply chain performance, with lead-times for deliveries of products and materials shortening to the greatest extent since September 2009.”

Latest news

Ready mix concrete giant files administration notice

Mixit Concrete Limited lodges court notice
4 hours ago

Dual student towers plan for Birmingham Gun Quarter

Sama Investments goes to public consultation on 50-storey scheme
4 hours ago

15 win £3.5bn Eastern Route Partnership railway deal

Amco, BAM, Morgan Sindall and Story among winners on Eastern Routes Partnership
3 hours ago

Expanding Caddick Group tops £500m turnover

Construction drives revenue growth and returns to profit
4 hours ago

Structure Tone returns to profit

Contractor confident about prospects in London fit out and refurb market
4 hours ago

33 firms secure spots on £3.6bn Northumbrian Water framework

Applebridge, Galliford, Esh and Keltbray may
4 hours ago

Construction boss in court over dodgy van deals

Suspended jail sentence after court hears how millions in unexplained payments went through Leeds contractor
4 hours ago

Development firm fails hitting London building team for £2.6m

Luxury flats builder Ant Yapi was contracted to redevelop Westminster Tower site
1 day ago

Government set to fund £1bn final HS2 London tunnel drive

Final tunnel drive to be taxpayer funded upfront with cash recouped later
1 day ago

Amazon fires up Big-Box market with £500m job

Next generation triple floor super-shed to be built near Northampton
1 day ago

Stricken road sweeper specialist rescued

Parts of hire specialist Go Plant bought out of administration by Sweeptech
1 day ago

Costain highways lead joins Buro Happold

Paula Gough appointed to UK Development Director for Infrastructure
1 day ago

G&H Group lands £20m+ M&E package from JJ Rhatigan

100-strong specialist team to start on West London site next week
1 day ago

Bidding open for £800m professional services deal

Procure Partnerships encourages SMEs to bid with 9 regional lots
1 day ago

Construction buyers see fastest growth for 14 months

Commercial building work leads the way in April
2 days ago

Go Modular Technologies files administration notice

Southampton bespoke volumetric specialist employs around 60 staff
2 days ago

Cladding firm went down owing supply chain £7.7m

Debts revealed at Everton stadium cladding contractor Alucraft Systems Ltd
2 days ago

Rydon dogged by legacy fire safety remediation costs

£19m spent on fire safety remediation work to date
2 days ago

Carpenter killed by falling timber frame panels

Court fines specialist contractor £8,000 after site tragedy
6 days ago

Trio of builders win King’s Award for sustainability

Henry Brothers, Willmott Dixon and ZED Pods recognised for sustainability
2 days ago

Kent police seize huge haul of stolen site tools

Hunt for power drill fitted with tracker busts tool theft ring
2 days ago

Robertson names new Northern construction chiefs

Ian Phillips promoted and Ricky Brown joins from Morgan Sindall
2 days ago

Road sweeper specialist files administration notice

Go Plant lodges court notice
6 days ago

Anglian Homes rides in to finish crashed Everest contracts

Rival doubled glazed window specialist commits to complete orders
6 days ago

Final work starts to connect super sewer to London system

End in sight with 1.5m thick concrete wall to be demolished to link-up to Lee Tunnel sewer system
6 days ago

Legal challenge launched against £1.5bn A66 dualling

Balfour Beatty, Kier and Keltbray must now await outcome of court challenge
6 days ago

John F Hunt wins 24-storey Battersea tower

Specialist to carry-out demolition, enabling works and RC frame construction
7 days ago

William Hare wins steelwork on £500m Broadgate towers

Specialist to work on 2 Finsbury Avenue with McAlpine
1 week ago

McAlpine appoints MD to grow ventures business

Owain Thomas will build on private rental and healthcare development successes
7 days ago

BAM Co-op Live Arena opening delayed yet again

Another gig cancelled last night amid last minute safety concerns
1 week ago

Contractor services