Key Findings:
- Fastest reductions in output and new orders since February 2021
- Price and supply-chain pressures ease, but remain marked overall
- Business confidence weakens to 19-month low
The S&P Global Eurozone Construction PMI® is compiled by S&P Global from responses to questionnaires sent to purchasing managers in a panel of around 650 construction firms in the eurozone. The headline figure is the Total Activity Index, which tracks changes in the total volume of construction activity compared with one month previously.
The S&P Global Eurozone Construction Total Activity Index fell from 50.4 in April to 49.2 in May, signalling a renewed reduction in construction activity midway through the second quarter of the year. The contraction was the sharpest recorded for 15 months and was largely attributed to higher raw material prices and supply-chain disruptions dampening output and demand. Underlying data indicated that all three monitored sub-sectors posted declines in May, with house building work falling for the first time since February 2021. Commercial work decreased at the sharpest pace since April 2021, while the downturn in civil engineering work was the strongest for six months.
May data pointed to a renewed decline in home building activity in the eurozone, the first since February 2021. That said, the rate of decrease was only mild.
Commercial building activity fell at a quicker pace during May, one that was the fastest since April 2021.
Work undertaken on civil engineering projects was in contraction territory for the second successive month in the latest survey period. The decline was the quickest for six months but moderate overall.
New orders placed with eurozone construction companies contracted for the second month running in May. The pace of decline accelerated from the previous survey period and was the quickest since February 2021. Anecdotal evidence suggested that rising raw material prices amid shortages had weighed on demand and delayed new project starts.
The Exporting from the UK section of the Construct UK Directory includes
– International Construction Exhibitions – UK Government Support for Exhibiting Overseas – Identifying Suitable Markets – Agent or Distributor – International Project Lead Sources
Eurozone construction firms expressed pessimism toward the 12-month outlook for the third consecutive month in May. The Future Activity Index slipped to its lowest mark in 19 months.
Vendor performance across the eurozone construction sector deteriorated at the softest rate for three months in May. That said, average lead times lengthened rapidly in all three of the bloc’s largest members.
Latest data showed a softer, albeit still rapid, rise in input costs faced by eurozone construction firms. The rate of inflation was the slowest since February, yet faster than any seen prior to May 2021. A number of panel members linked higher raw material prices to supplier shortages that were exacerbated by the Ukraine war.
Purchasing activity undertaken by eurozone constructors rose for the fifteenth time in as many months during May. The pace of increase eased from April and was the softest since March 2021 however.
May data pointed to a broad stabilisation in staffing levels at eurozone constructors, as the respective seasonally adjusted index was only fractionally below the 50.0 nochange mark.
Commenting on the latest results, Usamah Bhatti, Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence, said, “The eurozone construction sector contracted at a mild rate during May, marking the first reduction in activity since last August. The rate of contraction was the strongest since February 2021, and was largely linked to stalled demand and activity amid raw material shortages and higher prices. This was despite tentative indications that delivery delays and rising cost burdens had reached their peaks and began to ease. Nonetheless, this is from series record, therefore the impact of supply chain disruptions are likely to remain a hinderance to demand, especially as the war in Ukraine continues. Construction firms in the bloc were increasingly pessimistic regarding the outlook for activity over the coming year, with confidence at its lowest level since October 2020. At the national level, German firms reported the strongest decline in output for nine months, while Italian constructors signalled a further expansion in May that was nonetheless the softest in the current 16-month growth sequence. Businesses in France saw a mild increase that was the fastest since January.”
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