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2009:Construction
Material Prices Head South, Labor Costs Slow to Follow
- 040709
By Les Shaver
For the fifth straight month, the producer price index (PPI) for
multifamily finished goods fell in February, dropping 0.6
percent. The slide began last October, reached a low of -2 percent
in November, and has continued falling into this year.
Then year-over-year trends are going down as well. In 2004, the
multifamily PPI rose 8.9 percent. In 2005, it rose 7.8
percent; and in 2006 and 2007, it rose 4.9 percent and 3.8 percent,
respectively. But from February 2008 to February 2009, it
only rose 1.1 percent.
"In general, there's been a dramatic change in material costs from
last summer," says Kenneth D. Simonson, chief economist
for the Associated General Contractors of America, an Arlington,
Va.-based trade association. "We had these huge run-ups in
the first half of last year in diesel fuel, steel, copper, and
asphalt costs. They all did a U-turn."
Contractors in the field are seeing the same thing. "Overall, the
materials are generally flat [since last summer]," says
Jeff Roblyer, chief marketing officer with Capstone Building Corp.,
a developer based in Birmingham, Ala. "The suppliers are
giving up some margins in the sale. We've gone back on a couple of
estimates last summer and reduced them 5 percent across
the board."
Labor costs are still going up, but they're moderating. Simonson
says construction labor was rising from 4 percent to 4.5
percent last year and is only rising 3 percent to 3.5 percent this
year. A big part of that is because there's a large number
of construction professionals without work. While construction
accounts for about one out of every 20 jobs in the economy,
construction-related job losses represent 20 percent of overall job
loss.
"We expect labor costs to remain subdued because construction had
been on the bleeding edge of job losses in the economy,"
Simonson says.
Roblyer sees subcontracting companies taking major cuts. "From at
least a year ago, we're seeing a reduction in the margins
that subs and suppliers are asking for," he says. "We suspect some
people are working at no profit to keep their business
going."
But those price cuts don't necessarily extend to individual
laborers, if they can find work. "The carpenter on the street is
not taking a pay cut," he says. "He's either working, or he's laid
off. When he comes to work, he's making the same amount of
money."
Source: MULTIFAMILY
EXECUTIVE News Service