December 10, 2012

Anirban Basu, Marcum LLP’s Chief Construction Economist, Quoted in Globest.com Article "Construction Numbers Take a Wrong Turn"

Globest.com

By Paul Bubny

Featured Anirban Basu, Chief Construction Economist,

Anirban Basu, Marcum LLP’s Chief Construction Economist, Quoted in Globest.com Article "Construction Numbers Take a Wrong Turn"

Excerpt:

Gradual pickup in the economy notwithstanding, the construction sector hasn’t always been reaping the benefits, as a trio of new reports indicate. Locally, the New York Building Congress says the number of stalled development sites citywide has crept up 17% since this past February, effectively wiping out the improvements seen in this metric during 2011, while accounting and advisory firm Marcum LLP, also headquartered here, sees a wide gap between the residential and nonresidential sectors when it comes to year-over-year construction spending nationally.

And although the Associated General Contractors of America earlier this month reported a one-month gain in employment for the industry, the association more recently said that jobs in the sector were down Y-O-Y in 28 states and the District of Columbia between October ’11 and October of this year.

In its debut Marcum Commercial Construction Index, released Thursday, Marcum found that total nonresidential construction investment in the third quarter declined 4.4%, despite 2% annualized growth in the national economy during the quarter. Y-O-Y nonresidential construction spending in the third quarter rose just 2.6% in Q3, in contrast to the more than 19% growth in residential construction during the same period.

“Despite 13 consecutive quarters of economic growth, nonresidential construction has not been among the sectors experiencing meaningful recovery,” writes Anirban Basu, Marcum’s chief construction economist, in a report accompanying the release of the index. “The agonizingly slow recovery in nonresidential construction spending is attributable to many factors, including fiscal cliff fears, tight credit, cautious developers and stubbornly high vacancy rates in many market segments.”

On the plus side, Basu writes, the latter half of next year could be “surprisingly good” assuming that lawmakers and the Obama administration can avert careening over the fiscal cliff, “given the large volume of construction projects that were put on hold over the course of 2012.”

And Marcum sees three bright spots in the current picture: lodging, up 25% Y-O-Y; power-related infrastructure (up 19.2%) and transportation (up 11%).

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Anirban  Basu

Anirban Basu

Chief Construction Economist