Dados EUA: Construction Spending MoM 0% (esp. 0.7%); ISM Man
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10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. SEPT. CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS REVISED TO 0.1% VS. 0%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. PUBLIC-SECTOR CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS UP 1.2%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. PRIVATE-SECTOR CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS DOWN 0.3%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS DOWN 0.3%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. CONSTRUCTION SPENDING FLAT VS. 0.8% EXPECTED
10:02am 12/01/04 U.S. NOV. ISM MANUFACTURING INDEX ABOVE 56.8% CONSENSUS
10:02am 12/01/04 U.S. NOV. ISM NEW ORDERS 61.5% VS 58.3% IN OCT.
ECONOMIC REPORT: Construction outlays flat in Oct.
By Rex Nutting, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 10:01 AM ET Dec. 1, 2004
WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) - U.S. construction outlays were unchanged in October, as increased spending on highways was offset by the second straight decline in homebuilding, the Commerce Department estimated Wednesday.
Economists were looking for seasonally adjusted construction outlays to rise about 0.8 percent in October, according to the survey conducted by CBS MarketWatch. Outlays in September were revised slightly higher to a 0.1 percent gain from no change previously.
After providing a lift to economic activity over the past four years, construction has had fairly a benign impact for the past few months.
Construction outlays are up 7.1 percent in the past 12 months, but are up just 1.7 percent in the past six months. In the third quarter, investments in homes and business structures contributed just 0.1 percentage point to the 3.9 percent increased in gross domestic product.
Private-sector outlays fell 0.3 percent in October to $773.4 billion annualized after falling 0.1 percent in September. Private residential construction spending fell 0.3 percent to $549.4 billion for the second month in a row.
Residential spending is up 10.9 percent in the past 12 months.
Private nonresidential construction spending fell 0.4 percent to $224 billion in October, the largest decline since January.
Spending on private commercial space dropped 1.6 percent. Spending on offices, health care and religious buildings also declined. The biggest gains were in communication and transportation.
Public-sector construction outlays rose 1.2 percent to $236 billion, with state and local spending climbing 1.5 percent to $218.4 billion. Outlays for highways and streets rose 6.4 percent to $66.7 billion, accounting for most of the gains. Spending on power rose 5.8 percent, while health care increased 5.6 percent.
In other reports, the Commerce Department said consumer spending increased 0.7 percent in October while personal incomes increased 0.6 percent in October.
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. PUBLIC-SECTOR CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS UP 1.2%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. PRIVATE-SECTOR CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS DOWN 0.3%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION OUTLAYS DOWN 0.3%
10:00am 12/01/04 U.S. OCT. CONSTRUCTION SPENDING FLAT VS. 0.8% EXPECTED
10:02am 12/01/04 U.S. NOV. ISM MANUFACTURING INDEX ABOVE 56.8% CONSENSUS
10:02am 12/01/04 U.S. NOV. ISM NEW ORDERS 61.5% VS 58.3% IN OCT.
ECONOMIC REPORT: Construction outlays flat in Oct.
By Rex Nutting, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 10:01 AM ET Dec. 1, 2004
WASHINGTON (CBS.MW) - U.S. construction outlays were unchanged in October, as increased spending on highways was offset by the second straight decline in homebuilding, the Commerce Department estimated Wednesday.
Economists were looking for seasonally adjusted construction outlays to rise about 0.8 percent in October, according to the survey conducted by CBS MarketWatch. Outlays in September were revised slightly higher to a 0.1 percent gain from no change previously.
After providing a lift to economic activity over the past four years, construction has had fairly a benign impact for the past few months.
Construction outlays are up 7.1 percent in the past 12 months, but are up just 1.7 percent in the past six months. In the third quarter, investments in homes and business structures contributed just 0.1 percentage point to the 3.9 percent increased in gross domestic product.
Private-sector outlays fell 0.3 percent in October to $773.4 billion annualized after falling 0.1 percent in September. Private residential construction spending fell 0.3 percent to $549.4 billion for the second month in a row.
Residential spending is up 10.9 percent in the past 12 months.
Private nonresidential construction spending fell 0.4 percent to $224 billion in October, the largest decline since January.
Spending on private commercial space dropped 1.6 percent. Spending on offices, health care and religious buildings also declined. The biggest gains were in communication and transportation.
Public-sector construction outlays rose 1.2 percent to $236 billion, with state and local spending climbing 1.5 percent to $218.4 billion. Outlays for highways and streets rose 6.4 percent to $66.7 billion, accounting for most of the gains. Spending on power rose 5.8 percent, while health care increased 5.6 percent.
In other reports, the Commerce Department said consumer spending increased 0.7 percent in October while personal incomes increased 0.6 percent in October.
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Dados EUA: Construction Spending MoM 0% (esp. 0.7%); ISM Man
Dados EUA: Construction Spending MoM 0% (esp. 0.7%); ISM Manufacturing 57.8 (esp. 57.0)
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LJ Carregosa SA
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