Construction spending rises
Reading jumps 0.3% in June. Rate for public buildings hits record $322 billion.
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- U.S. construction spending beat expectations and rose 0.3 % in June, with the spending rate for public buildings reaching a record high, the Commerce Department said on Monday.
Analysts polled by Reuters had forecast construction spending to fall 0.5%, after dropping to a revised 0.8% in May, which was originally reported as a decline of 0.9%.
Public construction gained by 1% to $321.75 billion, the highest on record. State and local construction also rose 1% to a record $295.79 billion, and federal building was up 1.9%.
It was the fifth month in a row that public construction, which makes up a third of total U.S. construction spending, made gains.
While private construction dropped for the second month in a row, by 0.1%, private residential building, which makes up a quarter of construction spending, rose 0.5% to $246.07 billion.
The spending rate will likely add to hopes the housing sector, which triggered the current recession, is starting to rebound.
"For construction spending, all the signs are there that we've pulled back and that we are on the verge of growing again," said Jim Awad, managing director at Zephyr Management in New York.
The Commerce Department said private residential construction fell 3.1% in May, much less than the 3.4% decline originally reported. At the same time, April's residential construction was revised to a 1.5% rise from last month's report that it was unchanged.
Public residential construction was up 4.6% from May, as well.
Compared to June 2008, total construction spending was down 10.2%.