UK construction output showed an unexpected improvement in September, following two months of falling output. However, outlook has dimmed as survey reveals weakest trend for new orders since recovery began in 2020
At 52.3 in September, up from 49.2 in August, the headline seasonally adjusted S&P Global / CIPS UK Construction Purchasing Managers’ Index registered above the 50.0 no-change value for the first time since June.
The latest reading was the highest for three months and signalled an overall increase in construction output. Survey respondents commented on a boost to activity from work on previously delayed projects.
Housebuilding was the best performing category in September
At 52.9 in September, housebuilding was the best performing category with growth reaching a five-month high.
Commercial work increased only marginally (51.0), while civil engineering activity (49.6) fell for the third month in a row. Survey respondents often commented on a strong pipeline of outstanding work, but incoming new orders remained relative scarce in September.
Construction output showed September was the worst month for new orders in two and a half years
Latest construction output data signalled that new business volumes were broadly unchanged overall, which represented the worst month for new orders for almost two and-a-half years.
Construction firms cited slow decision making among clients and greater risk aversion due to inflation concerns, squeezed budgets and worries about the economic outlook. Subdued client demand contributed to a marginal reduction in purchasing activity across the construction sector.
Employment growth was on the rise in September
The latest construction output showed that employment growth in September accelerated from August’s 17-month low, with around 21% of survey respondents reporting a rise in staffing levels.
Higher workforce numbers reflected efforts to boost business capacity, although construction firms continued to cite shortages of candidates to fill vacancies and strong wage pressures.
Average cost burdens increased sharply in September, but the overall rate of inflation eased to its lowest since February 2021.
There was an escalation in energy costs and greater prices paid across the board for construction products and materials in September. Lower fuel prices and improved transportation availability were cited as factors helping to moderate the overall pace of cost inflation.
Poor business outlook reflected deepening concerns around rising interest rates, the energy crisis and UK recession risk
Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, which compiles the survey said: “UK construction companies experienced a modest increase in business activity during September, but the return to growth was fuelled by delayed projects and easing supply shortages rather than a flurry of new orders.
“Reports of delivery delays for construction products and materials were the least widespread since the pandemic began as greater business capacity and improved transport availability helped to ease pressure on supply chains.
“However, forward-looking survey indicators took another turn for the worse in September, with new business volumes stalling and output growth expectations for the year ahead now the lowest since July 2020. This reflected deepening concerns across the construction sector that rising interest rates, the energy crisis and UK recession risks are all set to dampen client demand in the coming months.”
‘Rise in output has no sign of sustainable growth behind it’
Dr John Glen, chief economist at the Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply, said:
“Developments in the UK economy have given the sector food for thought as supply chain managers reported softer levels of buying last month and the new orders index slipped to its lowest since May 2020. Though the headline index showed growth after two months in
contraction, the devil lies in the detail pointing to lower customer confidence, a challenging UK economy and recession on the doorstep.
“Firstly, the rise in output has no sign of sustainable growth behind it as without new pipelines of work any gains will soon leak away. This was not lost on builders themselves who reported the lowest level of optimism since July 2020 about business opportunities in the next year.
“Secondly, the costs of doing business and the cost of living are still high and rising. More expensive energy and salary pressures to secure skilled staff have contributed to additional inflation, though 21% of building companies in the sector were still hiring to maintain capacity for current projects.
“The housing sector remained the strongest performer in September although with interest rates rising and mortgage costs affecting affordability rates especially for first-time buyers, this will be an obstacle for house building to keep up the momentum as we approach
2023.”