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AGC: Nonresidential construction ‘continuing to slide’

Residential construction was up in October, but private and public nonresidential spending remained flat over the month while declining 3.7 percent from October 2019, according to the Association of General Contractors (AGC). Keep Reading

Report: Construction spending up, but so are cancellations, delays

Construction spending in September improved 3 percent, but 75 percent of contractors have experienced delays or cancellations, according to an industry report. Keep Reading

Dodge Momentum Index shows second consecutive rise

Dodge Data & Analytics reported the second consecutive monthly rise in its Momentum Index, a sign that the construction sector is continuing to recover. Keep Reading

AGC: Construction spending down four straight months

The Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) provides insights on spending in June following an analysis of government data. Keep Reading

AGC: Construction spending down in May 2020

A drop in private work outweighed a public pickup for the month, according to the Association of General Contractors (AGC). Keep Reading

AGC: Construction spending shrinking, new financing needed

As spending levels decline due to public agencies and private companies halting work, Associated General Contractors of America (AGC) officials warn the need for new investments is mounting significantly. Keep Reading

U.S. construction spending drops in April 2020

U.S. construction spending declined 2.9 percent in April to an adjusted annual rate of $1.346 trillion, according to the Commerce Department. Keep Reading

Report: New pace to nonresidential construction as economy cools

According to Marcum LLP, nonresidential construction outlays have failed to expand over the past year in real terms despite a surge in spending by state and local governments. Keep Reading

Report: Construction spending reaches record high

Spending should stay robust through early 2019, according to the Associated General Contractors of America. But trade disputes, workforce shortages and rising interest rates threaten to undermine long-term growth in construction demand. Keep Reading

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