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US construction spending increases in May but homebuilding is weak

The U.S. construction sector grew in May, despite the fact that mortgage rates were higher due to the Middle East conflict.

Census Bureau of the Commerce Department?said that construction spending increased 0.1% on Wednesday after a downwardly-revised 0.3% rise in April. Economists surveyed by predicted construction spending would gain 0.1% following a previously reported increase of 0.4% in April.

In May, construction spending declined 1.5% compared to the same month last year. The amount spent on private construction projects remained unchanged in May after increasing by 0.3% the previous month. Residential construction investment increased by 0.3% due to renovations.

The spending on single-family housing projects fell by 0.1%. In May, it fell 4.0% on an annual basis.

The U.S. Israel war against Iran has boosted?oil rates, which in turn have pushed up mortgage rates and inflation. Data from mortgage finance agency Freddie Mac shows that the average?rate of the?popular 30 year fixed-rate mortgage increased by 50 basis points after the conflict began at the end February.

It averaged 6.49 % last week. The spending on multi-family units, which make up a tiny part of the housing market in May, fell by 0.1%.

In May, investment in non-residential private structures like?power plants and factories fell by 0.3%. The spending on factory construction fell by 1.3% while power plant expenditures decreased by 0.1%. This is despite an increase in data centers for artificial intelligence.

Investments in?public-sector construction projects increased by 0.5% in May, following a similar increase in April. State and local government construction spending increased 0.4% in May, while federal government expenditures jumped 1.3%. This is likely due to the building of immigration detention centers. (Reporting and editing by Andrea Ricci; Reporting by Lucia Mutikani)

(source: Reuters)