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US construction materials prices
rise in October |
The producer price index (PPI) report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) stated that construction materials prices rose 0.3 percent month-over-month in October on a seasonally adjusted basis. However, the change in construction materials prices for September was revised 0.1 percentage point lower. September¡¯s prices are now listed as being unchanged for the month. The index of components and materials for construction was up 1.0 percent from its year-earlier level. Overall prices for processed goods for intermediate demand were up 0.5 percent for the month. The volatile prices of processed fuels and lubricants rose 1.2 percent. The overall processed goods for intermediate demand index was 1.2 percent lower than its year-earlier level. For reference, the changes in these indices compare with a 2.6 percent rise in the all-items consumer price index (CPI-U) for the 12 months ending in October. Yield Pro compiled the BLS reported changes for our standard list of construction materials prices. These are prices of materials which directly impact the cost of constructing an apartment building. The first two right hand columns of the table provide the percent change in the price of the commodity from a year earlier (12 Mo PC Change) and the percent change in price from September (1 Mo PC Change). If no price data is available for a given commodity, the change is listed as N/A. The pre-COVID column lists the change in the current construction materials prices relative to the average of prices from December 2019 through February 2020, before the pandemic impacted the economy. This provides a longer-term view of construction materials price trends. The prices used by the BLS in compiling the indexes are collected on the Tuesday of the week containing the 13th day of the month. In September that would have been September 15. In the October report, the data collection date will be October 12. The first chart, below, shows the price index history for wood products over the past 37 months. ¡¡ After reaching a recent low in July, softwood lumber price
index climbed again this month, rising 1.6 percent. It is now up
7.2 percent since July. |