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Contractor Update

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Housing & Construction Reports

Friday, September 01, 2006

Economic reports from today:

The Baltimore Sun: "Home sellers aren't the only ones pained by the sharp housing market slowdown: So are people who build houses. U.S. homebuilders and residential specialty trade employers cut 21,200 jobs in May, June and July, usually the peak building months, according to the most recent preliminary numbers from the Labor Department. The statistics, adjusted for seasonal variations, also showed a significant job loss in March."

'Some of the larger builders have laid off as many as 30 percent of their total staff in this area,' said John Kortecamp, of the Home Builders Association of Maryland. (Builder) Chris Rachuba in Eldersburg has been getting calls from subcontractors hoping that he has more work for them, a turnaround from the days when there weren't enough subcontractors to go around. Suppliers that used to be too busy to bother with sales cold calls are descending on him, too."

The Yahoo Finance page: "Construction spending plunged by the largest amount in nearly five years, reflecting spreading weakness in the housing industry. It was the fourth consecutive decline in residential construction and the biggest drop since January 2002, providing dramatic evidence that the nation's five-year housing boom has come to an end.

Builder confidence has plunged this year as they have struggled with weakening demand in the face of rising mortgage rates. A record backlog of unsold homes has forced many builders to offer an array of incentives to reduce supplies.

Outside of housing, there continued to be areas of strength in construction as nonresidential private building activity edged up 0.3 percent to a record annual rate of $303.5 billion. Gains in July came in construction of office buildings, power plants and transportation facilities.

Public construction fell by 0.7 percent in July reflected a 1 percent decline in state and local building projects which was only partially offset by a 2.6 percent rise in federal construction activity."

posted by ConstructionDeal.com, 2:31 PM

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