April Sees a “Turn For the Worse” For Construction as Market See-Sawing Continues
Posted by Construction Industry News Magazine on 19th May 2023 -
Infrastructure was hit the hardest, falling 71% to just £400m in April, the lowest month since May 2020, suggesting initial month-on-month momentum from recent Government budget statements may be stalling. Meanwhile, Residential Contract Awards fell 40% to £1.4bn as the sector continued to struggle with rising interest rates. Hotel and leisure fell by 54% to £200m.
Barbour ABI Chief Economist Tom Hall compared April figures to recent highs and lows experienced by the market, commenting: “We are seeing a see-sawing effect in 2023, potentially due to the industry’s uncertainties and constraints. The start of the new financial year saw weaker activity across the board as uncertainty in the wider economy and construction continued. Time will tell whether this is a definitive turn for the worse in April or just another blip in the road.”
Elsewhere it was further bad news, with just £5.9bn planning approvals in April pointing to continued uncertainty in the future.
Mr Hall added: “All sectors apart from industrial fell back to below-average levels with many large percentage falls. All things considered; this represents a real famine after March’s £12bn feast.”
Meanwhile, planning applications returned to normal levels with £9.1bn in March. However, taken as a whole, the first quarter of 2023 still showed a significant fall of 22% compared to the previous quarter to the lowest level since the second Covid in 2022.
Looking ahead at residential, Mr Hall said: “Those searching for a ray of light over residential will remain disappointed. We have seen a 30% increase in applications in April. But, looking across the whole quarter, the situation remains desperately weak, with an extremely low Relative Strength Index demonstrating a dearth of month-on-month momentum and approvals performing poorly.
More positively, the commercial, industrial and healthcare sectors saw activity continuing, and the education sector saw a near-record with £800m.
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