2012 Economic Calendar
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Construction Spending
Released On 1/3/2012 10:00:00 AM For Nov, 2011
PriorPrior RevisedConsensusConsensus RangeActual
Construction Spending - M/M change0.8 %-0.2 %0.5 %-0.6 % to 1.4 %1.2 %
Construction Spending - Y/Y change-0.4 %-0.6 %0.5 %

Highlights
The road may be a little bumpy but construction spending continues to head up from low levels of activity. Despite the low baseline, activity is stronger than expected as construction spending in November jumped 1.2 percent after slipping 0.2 percent in October (originally up 0.8 percent). The market consensus called for a 0.5 percent increase in November.

The November increase was led by a 2.0 percent gain in private residential outlays, following a 2.3 percent boost in October. Both the single-family and multifamily subcomponents showed strength. Public outlays rebounded 1.7 percent, following a 1.8 percent decline in October. Private nonresidential construction spending was unchanged in November after decreasing 0.6 percent the prior month.

On a year-ago basis, overall construction outlays improved to up 0.5 percent in November from down 0.6 percent in October.

On the news, equities showed modest additional improvement although a better-than-expected ISM manufacturing index also provided lift. Stocks had earlier risen sharply on favorable manufacturing news from China and India.

Market Consensus before announcement
Construction spending in October advanced 0.8 percent after rising an unrevised 0.2 percent in September. The October increase was led by a 3.4 percent boost in private residential outlays, following a 0.6 percent rise in September. Private nonresidential construction spending also posted a gain, rising 1.3 percent, following a 0.1 percent dip the month before. Public outlays declined 1.8 percent after a 0.3 percent increase the prior month.

Definition
The dollar value of new construction activity on residential, non-residential, and public projects. Data are available in nominal and real (inflation-adjusted) dollars.  Why Investors Care
 
[Chart]
Over the last year, a decline in residential outlays has pulled down year-on-year growth for overall construction outlays. Nonresidential and public outlays are positive with nonresidential actually strong.
Data Source: Haver Analytics
 

 

2012 Release Schedule
Released On: 1/32/13/14/25/16/17/28/19/410/111/112/3
Release For: NovDecJanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOct
 


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