Cincinnati, Ohio (May 4, 2018)—ConstructConnect, provider of construction information and technology solutions in North America, announced the release of its Summer 2018 Forecast Quarterly Report. Due to disappointing results in Q1, the forecast of total construction starts for full-year 2018 versus 2017 was lowered to +0.4 percent in ConstructConnect's Summer outlook from +3.0 percent in its spring report. Much of this is due to the non-residential building sector, which is predicted to decline by 6.1percent for 2018.

Total starts in both 2016 and 2017 were +13.2percent. After pausing in 2018, total starts are expected to perk up again in 2019, to slightly over +7 percent.

"Single-family residential will be a source of strong starts activity for years to come," explained ConstructConnect Chief Economist Alex Carrick. "Young adults will start to gain more stable and higher-paying jobs, begin to raise their families and, in many instances, alter their lifestyles to move back into quieter communities."

The forecast, which combines ConstructConnect's proprietary data with macroeconomic factors and Oxford Economics' econometric expertise, highlighted several indicators that are preventing healthier growth in non-residential building, including: 

  • More volatile stock market activity
  • Interest rate hikes
  • The threat of trade wars
  • Rising inflation from climbing commodity prices and higher wages from a worker shortage

In the engineering category, the public sector may still be talking restraint, but means are being found to finance new bridge and highway undertakings and necessary repairs to infrastructure. Other market segments reflect influential factors, including: 

  • A cyclical high for hotel/motel starts is beginning to wind down.
  • Retail starts will continue to struggle due to the shift to Internet platforms.
  • Office tower groundbreakings will soon benefit from falling vacancy rates.
  • The surge in online consumer sales will keep driving warehouse construction.
  • An aging population will spur more building of health care facilities.
  • Lackluster enrollments are muting capital expansions in higher education.

To learn more about ConstructConnect or get a free copy of the Forecast Quarterly Report, visit constructconnect.com.