Nonresidential construction spending, which rose by 3.5% in the second half of 2019, is expected to increase in 2020, albeit at a modest 2% clip, with demand projected to weaken as the year goes on.
In its Construction Outlook for the U.S. 2020, JLL attributed last year’s performance mostly to the 10.1% rise in public spending. Construction employment was up 2.1% to 6.44 million, and construction unemployment dipped to 4.5%. Indexed building costs increased 1.5% year-over-year.
In 2020, the dollar value of construction starts (according to Dodge Data & Analytics) is expected to decline by nearly 5%. And JLL expects the disparity between public and private nonres construction spending to continue.
With nearly all growth in construction spending coming from public dollars, the sectors expected to do well this year will be those with the most public investment, such as transportation, education, healthcare and public safety. The reverse will be true about multifamily residential, commercial office, hotels, and retail.
JLL forecasts construction inflation to fall somewhere between 1% and 3%, and by a bit higher percentages on the labor side.
Inflation in the cost of construction materials has been held in check.
JLL was reluctant to speculate on the impact of the coronavirus on construction. But it did note that roughly between one-quarter and one-third of all construction products in the U.S. are sourced from China, so any sustained slowdown in Chinese production due to the spread of COVID 19 may cause material shortages in the U.S.
The Outlook’s projections about the U.S. economy—that it would remain strong enough in 2020 to keep the construction industry on track overall, but would not provide the private investment fuel that would be necessary for robust growth—were made before the economy appeared to be sinking into recession in mid March.
On the plus side, the Outlook points out that the ratified U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement is on track to be fully implemented in 2020. “The agreement brings stability to critical material markets for the construction industry, particularly for lumber, steel and aluminum,” JLL posited. Across the Pacific, the U.S. and China signed a Phase One agreement to roll back a very small portion of the tariffs that were imposed between the two countries over the past few years. Phase One represents the first time under the Trump administration that average tariff rates on Chinese imports have declined.
Construction confidence was flat to down in 2019, according to several measurements.
Much of the Outlook was actually devoted to recounting key metrics from last year. It points out, for example, that construction confidence was flat in 2019, while the Commercial Construction Index, as aggregated by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and USG, dropped in the fourth quarter to its lower level in three years.
Last year, the rate of increase for construction materials eased a bit, to 3%, with most of that increase occurring in the first half of the year. Steel-mill products, in fact, experienced a 14.2% decrease over the 12-month period.
The most expensive cities with more than 150,000 people to build in last year were the usual suspects: New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Honolulu, and Fairbanks, Alaska. The least expensive were Knoxville, Tenn., Austin, Amarillo, Texas, Little Rock, Ark., and El Paso, Texas.
JLL’s Outlook also provides regional comparisons for the years 2008 through 2019. In that context, for example, warehouses were the strongest construction sector in the Midwest and Northeast, Amusement & Recreation in the West, and Auto Service/Parts in the South. The sectors with the greatest decline over that decade were bank and financial offices (Northeast and South), Multiretail (West), and houses of worship (Midwest).
As for overall growth during this 10-year period. the Northeast, West, and Midwest fell short of the national average in terms of construction backlog, while the South outperformed the country as a whole.
Related Stories
Market Data | Mar 24, 2021
Architecture billings climb into positive territory after a year of monthly declines
AIA’s ABI score for February was 53.3 compared to 44.9 in January.
Market Data | Mar 22, 2021
Construction employment slips in 225 metros from January 2020 to January 2021
Rampant cancellations augur further declines ahead.
Market Data | Mar 18, 2021
Commercial Construction Contractors’ Outlook lifts on rising revenue expectations
Concerns about finding skilled workers, material costs, and steel tariffs linger.
Market Data | Mar 16, 2021
Construction employment in January lags pre-pandemic mark in 42 states
Canceled projects, supply-chain woes threaten future jobs.
Market Data | Mar 15, 2021
Rising materials prices and supply chain disruptions are hurting many construction firms
The same firms are already struggling to cope with pandemic impacts.
Market Data | Mar 11, 2021
Soaring materials costs, supply-chain problems, and project cancellations continue to impact construction industry
Costs and delayed deliveries of materials, parts, and supplies are vexing many contractors.
Market Data | Mar 8, 2021
Construction employment declines by 61,000 in February
Association officials urge congress and Biden administration to focus on new infrastructure funding.
Market Data | Mar 2, 2021
Construction spending rises in January as private nonresidential sector stages rare gain
Private nonresidential market shrinks 10% since January 2020 with declines in all 11 segments.
Market Data | Feb 24, 2021
2021 won’t be a growth year for construction spending, says latest JLL forecast
Predicts second-half improvement toward normalization next year.
Market Data | Feb 23, 2021
Architectural billings continue to contract in 2021
AIA’s Architecture Billings Index (ABI) score for January was 44.9 compared to 42.3 in December.