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

Wates rejigs businesses as veteran leader retires

Wates Construction Group MD Paul Chandler to retire at end of year
11 hours ago

Scaffolder dies from chemical burns

Tata Chemicals Europe fined £1.125m after death of Altrad scaffolder
2 hours ago

M&E firms warn of persistent skills shortages

Shortage of adequately skilled workers blamed for slow growth
56 mins ago

Southern Water names consultants for AMP8

Seven firms to share £240m in professional services spend
11 hours ago

Construction buyers see momentum building

Contractors gearing-up for future growth as workloads and confidence rise
23 hours ago

Bouygues bags £80m London NHS diagnostic centre job

New five-storey scanning facility to be built at West Middlesex University Hospital
1 day ago

London £3bn schools framework out to tender

SMEs allocated slots on London Construction Programme education framework refresh
1 day ago

Berkeley’s £270m Bath gas works scheme approved

House builder plans to build over 600 flats on banks of River Avon
1 day ago

Road sweeper firm Go Plant went down owing suppliers £4.3m

Former staff launch claim for compensation
1 day ago

Openreach fined £1.34m after engineer drowns in river

Court hears how engineer was swept away after falling into water while trying to repair a telephone line
1 day ago

Glencar bags £30m Cambridge lab and office job

Project will be built at Chesterford Research Park life sciences cluster
1 day ago

Bids due in to replace Luton Airport car park destroyed by fire

Big name firms set to battle for £37.5m contract
2 days ago

Plan in for £500m London beds and sheds docks scheme

Work to start in early 2025 on 200 flats, 1,400 student bed and logistic scheme
2 days ago

Operator trapped on crane boom in London site fire

Seven hospitalised after blaze at Bouygues East London building site
3 days ago

Kier FM arm splits into three business streams

Kier Places to extend reach to south coast with reorganisation
2 days ago

Seven secure £3bn United Utilities sewage works deal

Costain, Kier, Murphy and VolkerStevin among winners
2 days ago

Boot gets nod for £110m Walsall warehouse scheme

Work to start on former copper works site in the late Autumn
2 days ago

Surface repair rivals offer lifeline to ex-Merlin staff

Fellow specialists Prymo and LS Surface Repairs to help stricken staff and contractors
2 days ago

Statom Group wins civils package to transform port site

Specialist wins major deal to start transformation of Ardersier Port
3 days ago

Seddon Construction returns to profit

Focus on shorter term specialist work pays offs
3 days ago

Third contractor to finally finish £135m Swansea job

Andrew Scott to finish Copr Bay after Buckingham went bust and WIllmott Dixon scaled back involvement
4 days ago

Vistry strikes deal to build 1,750 private rental homes

Homes worth £580m will be pre-sold across 36 Vistry developments
3 days ago

Wrekin joins civil engineering products “supergroup”

Road ironworks specialist joins forces with European firms to form Civitec
3 days ago

Top construction chiefs call for more foreign workers

Infrastructure leaders set out blueprint for growth for next Government
3 days ago

Swedish giant officially launches UK operation

Sortera waste trucks now on site following acquisition of GBN Services and O’Donovan
3 days ago

Staff at surface repair specialist Merlin looking for new jobs

Workers let go as contractor "goes under without any notice"
4 days ago

JRL plans first Manchester 28 storey resi block

Contractor turns developer for £75m private flats project
4 days ago

Barratt and Springfield deal to deliver new Scottish village

Infrastructure work to start this year on £776m Durieshill site
4 days ago

Vigil for worker killed at Berkeley site

Worker hit by asphalt paver at Camden Goods Yard site
4 days ago

Weston Homes names next CEO

Housing expert Peter Gore takes over as group chief executive
4 days ago

Contractor services