ATLANTA โ U.S. construction starts came in slightly below expectations during the third quarter, with stronger activity in the civil engineering sector being more than offset by weaker growth in the residential and non-residential segments. Residential starts continued to post a healthy pace of annual growth, and the apparent weakness in the non-residential segment may be overstated due to upward revisions in historical data, according to CMDโs latest quarterly forecast report.
The Q4 forecast, which combines CMDโs proprietary data with macroeconomic factors, showed construction starts are expected to grow 6.8 percent in 2015, a little less than CMDโs Q3 prediction of 7.1 percent.
โDomestic activity is driving U.S. growth,โ said Alex Carrick, CMD chief economist. โAfter a slow start in 2015, US GDP recovered strongly in Q2, and robust domestic activity is expected to drive growth over the next few years.โ
According to the report, construction starts are expected to grow by 8.4 percent in 2016, as rising household incomes boost growth in the residential sector and stronger business investment elevates the non-residential sector. Only civil engineering construction is expected to slow from its heady pace in 2015.
โA good gain in U.S. construction starts in 2015 will accelerate in 2016 and 2017, before settling down in 2018 ,โ stated Carrick. โSome moderation in engineering strength, which has been a mainstay of site-work lately, will be compensated by a pick-up in non-residential building activity. In residential, pent-up demand for new housing continues to accumulate and will soon need addressing.โ