Home news UK construction activity shrinks by most in five years as housebuilding falls – business live | Business

UK construction activity shrinks by most in five years as housebuilding falls – business live | Business

by wellnessfitpro

UK construction activity falls by most in five years as residential building drops

Ouch! Activity in the UK construction sector has fallen at the fastest rate in over five years, indicating the government is struggling to hit its housebuilding targets.

Data firm S&P Global has reported that there was “a considerable slump in the UK construction sector” in July, as builders reported a renewed decline in housing projects.

That is a sign that Labour are falling behind in their target to boost housebuilding and build 1.5 million new homes by 2029.

Commercial construction, and civil engineering, both also shrank in July.

S&P Global says:

Underlying data highlighted marked decreases in volumes of work carried out across all three monitored sub-sectors, but a considerable drag came from a fresh drop in residential building.

This pulled the S&P Global UK Construction Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) down to posting 44.3 in July, from 48.8 in June.

Any reading below 50 shows a contraction, and today’s data signals the sharpest contraction in over five years.

A chart showing the UK construction PMI
A chart showing the UK construction PMI Photograph: S&P Global

Builders blamed site delays, lower volumes of incoming new business and weaker customer confidence for falling activity in July.

Joe Hayes, principal economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, says UK construction suffered “a fresh setback” in July, explaining:

Dissecting the latest contraction, we can see a fresh and sharp drop in residential building, as well as an accelerated fall in work carried out on civil engineering projects.

Forward-looking indicators from the survey imply that UK constructors are preparing for challenging times ahead. They’re buying less materials and reducing the number of workers on the payroll. Expectations also continue to underwhelm, despite a modest pick-up in confidence from June’s two-and-a-half-year low.

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Key events

Fast food chain McDonald’s has shrugged off economic anxiety, and posted a rise in sales in the last quarter.

McDonald’s has reported that global comparable sales increased by 3.8% in the April-June quarter, with “broad-based growth across all segments”.

Sales in the US rose by 2.5%, while McDonald’s overseas restaurants grew sales by 4%.

Bloomberg points out that this ended four quarters of weak growth as the burger chain dealt with an E. coli outbreak, backlash against American brands in the Middle East and consumer unease about the economy in response to President Trump’s trade disputes.

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