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FX.co ★ U.S. Construction Spending Unexpectedly Edges Slightly Lower In March

U.S. Construction Spending Unexpectedly Edges Slightly Lower In March

The Commerce Department reported on Wednesday that U.S. construction spending modestly declined in March, largely due to a drop in private construction expenditure.

According to the report, construction spending in March fell by 0.2% to an annual rate of $2.084 trillion, a result that defies economists' expectations of a 0.3% rise. The data for February was revised to show no change in construction spending, rather than the previously reported 0.3% decrease.

Private construction spending contributed significantly to the dip in March, sliding 0.5% to an annual rate of $1.601 trillion. Within the private sector, residential construction saw a decrease of 0.7% with an annual spending rate of $884.3 billion and non-residential construction slipped by 0.2% to a rate of $716.5 billion.

Conversely, public sector construction spending showed an opposite trend with an increase of 0.8% to an annual rate of $483.1 billion. A 1.0% rise brought educational construction spending to an annual rate of $102.7 billion, while highway construction spending went up by 0.9% to an annual rate of $149.0 billion.

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