Construction input prices rise first time since October

Prices rose 0.9 percent monthly in February and 1.8 percent over the past year.


Construction input prices rose 0.9 percent monthly in February and 1.8 percent in the past 12 months, according to an Associated Builders and Contractors (ABC) analysis of recently released U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Inputs to nonresidential construction were up 1 percent on a monthly basis and 2.7 percent on a yearly basis. This is the first time that input prices have risen on a monthly basis since October 2018, when prices increased by 0.5 percent, ABC says.   

Of the 11 construction subcategories, seven experienced price declines for the month, with the largest decreases in natural gas (-25.8 percent) and unprocessed energy materials (-10.7 percent). The largest monthly increases in prices were seen in softwood lumber (+4.8 percent) and crude petroleum (+2.6 percent).  

“While the monthly increase in materials prices was quite substantial, it makes more sense to focus on the year-over-year statistics,” says ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu in a news release. “Several factors were at work when materials prices were expanding very rapidly, including a synchronized global expansion and the initial effects of tariffs on items such as steel, aluminum and softwood lumber. At the time, year-over-year increases in materials prices were routinely in the double digits in percentage terms.

“Today, the annualized increase in materials prices is less than 2 percent, despite the data characterizing February,” Basu says. “Some of this is explained by the dip in oil prices during the past year, which is due in part to a softening global economy and a significant increase in U.S. oil production. However, other key construction materials prices also have declined during the last 12 months, including natural gas, nonferrous wire and cable and softwood lumber.

“With the global economy continuing to weaken, it is unlikely that materials prices will surge in the near term, despite a still very active U.S. nonresidential construction sector,” Basu says. “It is quite conceivable that much of the monthly increase in materials prices registered in February was associated with unusually severe winter weather in much of the nation. Difficulties involving transportation, for instance, have a tendency to push purchase prices higher. The implication is that the monthly increase registered in February will probably not be repeated in March and April.”

 

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