Monday, November 17, 2025

August construction spending: strong nominal headline masks neutral real trend in the deep rear view mirror

 

 - by New Deal democrat


The good news is, with the end of the government shutdown, economic data reporting resumed this morning. The bad news is, we are now in the latter part of November, and the construction spending report issued this morning was for all the way back in August. In fact, the last time I updated this information here was back at the beginning of September. So, since the information in this morning’s report is already stale, I am going to keep this brief.

When we last got information, for July, it continued the trend of declining since the summer of 2024 once we adjusted for the cost of construction materials.

In nominal terms, together with revisions, in August that reversed. For the month, total construction spending (blue in the graph below) rose 0.2%,  while residential construction spending (red, right scale) increased 0.8%, the third advance in a row for both metrics in nominal terms:



Adjusted by the cost of construction materials, however, residential construction spending declilned slightly, by less than -0.1%:


Although this is higher than readings this past spring, it looks more like stabilization than an actual turnaround - and once again, we are talking about August data, so it gives us almost no currently significant insight.

Finally, the boom in spending on building manufacturing plans continued to wane, after an explosive boom following the Biden infrastructure bill:



The August decline of -0.9% is the 10th decline in the past 12 months. While the buildout of new plants continues at a very strong pace, the trend (which is more important for the direction of the economy) is a decline.

Although the nominal headline increases are nice, I take this as no better than a neutral report

Jobless claims continue slightly elevated YoY

 

 - by New Deal democrat


Hopefully for the last time . . . As I have done since the beginning of the government shutdown, the unadjusted number of initial and continuing claims can be calculated based on reporting by the States, plus DC, and Puerto Rico. Then, by applying the same adjustment as was used for the same week last year, the seasonally adjusted number can also be estimated closely as well. This post covers initial claims for the week ending November 8, and continuing claims ending November 1.


Since my forecasting method relies on the YoY% changes, it is almost never an affected by that seasonality.  So tabulated, for the week ending November 8, unadjusted initial claims totaled 237,712 vs. 230,810 in 2024, an increase of 3.0%.  

Last year this week the seasonal multiplier was *0.94853. Applying it gives us an estimated seasonally adjusted number of 226,000.

We can similarly calculate the four week moving average, since the last four weeks of claims were 230,000, 220,000, and 225,000, as well as this week’s 226,000. That gives us an average of 225,250, which is 3,750, or 1.7% higher than the 221,500 of one year ago.

Using the same methodology, unadjusted continuing claims for the week ending November 1 totaled 1,715,989 vs. 1,647,230 last year, an increase of 4.2%.

The seasonal adjustment for the applicable week last year was *1.13645. Applying it gives us an estimate of 1.950 million continuing claims, or -4,000 lower than one week ago. Still, continuing claims throughout the government shutdown have all been close to their highest levels since 2021, which was 1.968 million this past July. 

Aside from the 2024 hurricane related distortions during October, this continues the general neutral trend that was in place before the shutdown, i.e. higher than one year ago but much less than 10% higher, forecasting a weakly expanding economy for the next several months.