海角社区app

海角社区app

Fri September 27 2024

Related Information

Signs of stabilisation in Irish construction

10 Jan 12 Total activity at construction firms in the Republic of Ireland fell only marginally during December and new orders rose, suggesting a stabilisation of the sector at the end of 2011.

Click to enlarge
Click to enlarge

However, purchasing activity and employment both continued to decline during the month according to the latest Ulster Bank Construction Purchasing Managers鈥 Index (PMI ).

The seasonally adjusted, which is designed to track changes in total construction activity, rose to 49.9 in December from 47.7, to signal only a negligible reduction in activity during the month. The latest reading was the highest since May 2007. Although a number of firms reported that business conditions remained fragile, others indicated that new order growth had acted to boost activity.

鈥淭here were further signs that the Irish construction sector may be approaching a point of stabilisation in the latest reading of the Ulster Bank Construction Purchasing Managers Index (PMI),鈥 said Ulster Bank chief economist Republic of Ireland Simon Barry. 鈥淭he December survey featured several encouraging developments including that the overall PMI rose to its highest level in over four and a half years. At 49.9, the PMI is just a fraction below the expansion-contraction threshold level of 50 indicating that the pace of decline in construction activity last month was negligible.鈥

The results point to a slight increase in housing activity last month 鈥 the first time the survey has pointed to a rise since October 2006 鈥 while the rate of decline in commercial activity eased for the fifth month in a row to just a fraction below the 50 level. 鈥淎s has been the case for most of the past two years, activity in Civil Engineering continues to underperform quite markedly and, unlike the other two sub-sectors, is continuing to contract at a sharp pace,鈥 he said.

鈥淎lso offering encouragement was a rise in the new orders index to back above 50 for the second time in three months, as some firms reported higher levels of new business,鈥 he added. 鈥淥ur overall take on these latest results is that they offer some heartening evidence that, after an extraordinarily severe downturn which has lasted over four and a half years, the Irish construction sector looks to be in the early stages of a bottoming out process. It would be wrong to characterise the construction outlook as positive but it looks as if 2012 could be a year where some semblance of stability takes hold after the slump experienced over 2007-11.鈥

Related Information

Housing activity rose for the first time since October 2006. Conversely, both commercial and civil engineering activity continued to fall. Activity on commercial projects decreased only marginally, while civil engineering activity declined sharply.

New orders increased for the second time in the past 聽three months, and at a solid pace that was the 聽sharpest since March 2007. According to 聽respondents, there had been signs of stability in the 聽market. 聽

However, construction firms continued to lower 聽employment during December, suggesting that the 聽rise in new business was insufficient to prevent spare 聽capacity existing within the sector. Although slower 聽than in November, the rate of job shedding remained 聽marked. 聽

Irish construction firms reduced their input buying 聽again in December. Although the rate of decline in 聽purchasing activity eased slightly over the month, it 聽was still solid. Respondents noted a reluctance to 聽build inventories.聽 In spite of the reduction in demand 聽for inputs, suppliers鈥 delivery times lengthened over 聽the month. Panellists attributed the deterioration to 聽low stock levels at suppliers. Lead times have now 聽lengthened in each of the past six months.聽 聽The rate of input cost inflation slowed in December, 聽and was weaker than the long-run series average. 聽That said, input prices still聽 increased for the twentieth 聽month in a row. 聽

Stabilisation in the sector and signs of improving new 聽business contributed to optimism among firms that 聽activity will be higher in 12 months鈥 time than current 聽levels. The level of positive sentiment increased for 聽the second consecutive month, and was the highest 聽since August.

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »