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New Construction Increases 5% in October

By November 26, 2013 November 19th, 2019 Construction Law

According to McGraw Hill Construction, new construction starts for October reached a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $585.6 billion after a 5% increase from the previous month.  The October increase came after a huge 13% gain in total construction starts for the month of September.  Total construction starts on an unadjusted rate are up 4% compared to last year during the same period, totaling at $433.0 billion.

A closer look by sector shows non-residential building was responsible for most of the construction gains in October, increasing by 20% to an annual rate of $216.9 billion.  The construction of three major manufacturing plants in particular lent a great hand in the boost.  These plants included a fertilizer plant in Iowa worth $1.7 billion, a natural gas processing plant in West Virginia worth $1.7 billion, and a gasification plant in Louisiana worth $1.5 billion.  Residential building as a whole bounced back from a slow September, increasing by 3% in October to an annual rate of $209.5 billion.  As for non-building construction, the annual rate decreased by 6% to $159.2 billion, due largely to a significant drop in electric utility construction.

To read to complete McGraw Hill Construction report, click here.       

Author Harrison Law Group

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