Construction input prices decreased 1.3% on both a monthly and yearly basis in June, according to anĀ Associated Builders and ContractorsĀ analysis of U.S. Bureau of Labor Statisticsā Producer Price Index data released today. This is the first time in nearly three years that input prices have fallen on a year-over-year basis.
Overall, nonresidential construction input prices declined 1.4% from May 2019 but are down just 0.8% from June 2018. Among the 11 sub-categories, only natural gas (+1.6%) and concrete products (+0.9%) prices increased compared to May 2019. On a yearly basis, three of the sub-category prices have declined by more than 20%, including softwood lumber (-23.1%), crude petroleum (-22.2%) and natural gas (-22.3%).
āEighteen months ago, surging construction materials prices represented one of the leading sources of concern among construction executives,ā said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu. āThat was a time of solid global economic growth and the first synchronized worldwide global expansion in approximately a decade. Yet things can change dramatically in a year and a half. According to todayās data release, construction materials prices are falling, in part a reflection of a weakening global economy.
āGiven that the United States is in the midst of its lengthiest economic expansion with an unemployment rate at approximately a 50-year low, such low inflation remains a conundrum,ā said Basu. āHowever, the June PPI numbers indicate that those commodities exposed to global economic weakness have been the ones to experience declines in prices, with the exception of concrete products and natural gas. While America has begun to export more natural gas, todayās prices largely reflect the domestic demand and supply.
āWith the global economy continuing to stumble, there is little reason to believe that materials prices will bounce back significantly,ā said Basu. āOf course, trade issues and other disputes can quickly alter the trajectories of prices. If economic forces are allowed to play out, contractors should be able to focus the bulk of their attention on labor compensation costs and worry relatively less about materials prices.ā
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