“Builders stars of the economy” as construction rebounds

Grant Prior 4 years ago
Share

Construction buyers saw a sharp turnaround in June as “builders were the stars of the UK economy” as lockdown eased.

The bellwether IHS Markit/CIPS UK Construction Total Activity Index jumped to 55.3 in June from 28.9 in May to record the sharpest monthly jump in output since June 2018.

Residential work led the way while commercial work and civil engineering activity also returned to growth in June.

The index measuring business expectations for the year ahead remained historically subdued, but climbed to its highest since February with 46% of the survey panel anticipating a rise while 31% forecast a reduction.

Tim Moore, Economics Director at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey said: “As the first major part of the UK economy to begin a phased return to work, the strong rebound in construction activity provides hope to other sectors that have suffered through the lockdown period.

“While it has taken time for the construction supply chain to adapt and rebuild capacity after widespread business closures, there is now clear evidence that a return to growth has been achieved.

“While some survey respondents commented on cautious optimism about their near-term prospects, construction companies continued to face challenges securing new work against an unfavourable economic backdrop and a lost period for tender opportunities.

“At the same time, operating expenses are rising due to constrained capacity across the supply chain and the impact of social distancing measures.

“Looking ahead, construction firms are more confident than at any time since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“However, the ongoing reductions in staffing numbers seen in June provide a stark reminder that underlying conditions across the sector are a long way off returning to those seen before the public health emergency.”

Duncan Brock, Group Director at the Chartered Institute of Procurement & Supply:”Builders were the stars of the UK economy in June with the fastest rise in purchasing activity in almost five years, as pent-up building plans were unleashed following the easing of lockdown measures.

“As business confidence improved to its largest extent since February, companies were buying up materials and laying the groundwork for a stronger summer’s end.

“This resulted in the highest input price inflation since the start of the year as supply chains creaked under the strain of increased shortages.

“Building performance is dependent on other sectors recovering at a similar pace, and as businesses were opening up, some fell short of their usual delivery capacity.

“Only two months ago the construction sector produced the worst results in the history of the PMI, and there are still some potholes to navigate around as Government support for jobs is stripped away.

“Employment levels remained deflated, with reports of redundancies, furloughed staff and a reluctance to boost staff numbers when new order levels remained so flat.

“But with a significant rise in the headline output number, it looks as though all the building blocks are there for the sector’s increasing health.”

Latest news

Go-ahead for City of London’s tallest tower

1 Undershaft building will equal the Shard in height
3 hours ago

Construction T Level scrapped due to lack of demand

Courses canned after less than 100 sign-up for latest round
1 day ago

Five firms clinch £300m Greenwich Uni framework deal

McLaren, Wates, Morgan Sindall, Vinci and Willmott Dixon secure places
8 hours ago

Hill Group strikes first Build to Rent deal

House builder agrees finance with Lloyds Living to start Stevenage scheme
9 hours ago

Construction output hit by fall in repair and maintenance

Industrial and commercial new work grows despite wider fall in activity
8 hours ago

Wates transfers pension scheme to “superfund”

Pension management specialist Clara to take charge of £210m fund
9 hours ago

Muse hires new development director for North West

Tom Darby joins from developer Bruntwood
9 hours ago

Bid rigging probe launched into school repair work

Firms raided this week with focus on roofing contracts
2 days ago

McLaren hires ex-ISG regional boss for north east expansion

Andrew Beaumont becomes MD of new Yorkshire and North East business
1 day ago

Government commits to four new prisons in seven years

£2.3bn pledged for new prison build programme
2 days ago

Road and rail delays hit revenue at Van Elle

Turnover drops 5% as markets remain challenging for piling specialist
1 day ago

Boot reports ‘noticeable improvement’ in planning system

Government planning reforms already unblocking council planning
1 day ago

Go-ahead to revamp former London city hall

Project will straighten the building's leaning profile with terraces to every level
2 days ago

United Living to divert Midlands gas pipeline

600m pipeline diversion clears way for M54 to M6 link road construction
1 day ago

Credit insurance saves Billington from ISG hit

Steel specialist puts on extra shifts at its plants to cope with demand
2 days ago

M&E specialist Dodd doubles profit on retrofit surge

Family-owned Telford specialist delivers record revenue of nearly £250m
2 days ago

Go-ahead for 800-home Croydon dual towers

One Lansdowne Road build to rent scheme to cost £260m to build
2 days ago

Construction inflation set to return raising tender prices

End of 2024 to mark the bottom of present inflationary trough
2 days ago

Start date for vast Balfour and Costain carbon capture power job

£4bn Teesside project to start construction next year creating 3,000 jobs
3 days ago

Plans go in to start revamp of North Finchley town centre

Developer Regal unveils first details of Barnet masterplan
2 days ago

Glencar bags £18m Big Yellow London store

Six-storey stoarage centre to be built at Staples Corner
2 days ago

Plan unveiled for 31-storey London Fenchurch Street tower

Demolition work to start in 2026 for new office tower
3 days ago

Vinci Building buys tower cranes for first time

Contractor invests in two WOLFFKRAN all-electric cranes at £138m Sheffield site
3 days ago

30 local firms land United Utilities £500m framework

Minor works deal win for North West civils and M&E specialists
3 days ago

Restructure pays off as Higgins returns to profit

Housing contractor recovers from £25.9m loss last year
3 days ago

Former Heathrow boss joins Mace in board rejig

Firm completes string NED appointments to expanded group board
4 days ago

Planning officers to get powers to bypass committee stage for housing

Rayner reform plan to cut out local council planning committees
4 days ago

National Insurance hike to delay construction recovery

Arcadis paints varied picture with full recovery delayed until 2026
4 days ago

Gratte Bros rides out cost rises with profit increase

M&E specialist warns of further upward pressure on wage costs
4 days ago

Sellar’s 36-storey London City office tower approved

Demolition work to start in 2026 at 60 Gracechurch Street site
6 days ago

Contractor services