The confidence of main contractors fell to 39 index points, from 45 in 3Q2015. The lower confidence was largely due to a sharp deterioration in the confidence of non-residential contractors. “According to the survey, non-residential building activity fell sharply during the quarter, leading to an uptick in competition” said John Loos, Property Economist at FNB. Loos added that “although there are areas where non-residential building activity remains robust, in general, underlying conditions have worsened noticeably over the last 12 months”
In contrast, residential main contractor confidence was largely unchanged despite the underlying indicators improving. Building activity in particular rose markedly. “The residential building sector has outperformed the non-residential market in terms of building activity over the past few quarters, however, this quarter the gap is much more noticeable” said Loos. “Although still subdued, the pace of growth in residential building activity definitely accelerated in Q4” added Loos.
A similar trend existed among building sub-contractors, where residential sub-contractors are performing better than their non-residential counterparts in terms of activity and profitability. In all, building sub-contractor confidence shed 5 points to register an index level of 51.
After falling to 37 in 3Q2015, confidence of hardware retailers gained 24 points to register an index level of 61. “Hardware retailer sales likely benefited from the rise in residential building activity during the quarter, however, continued informal building activity as well as the building renovations market may also have lifted sales,” according to Loos. Confidence of wholesalers of building material - which is not included in the index - also rose on the back of a sharp spike in sales.
The rise in hardware sales and the improvement in residential building is yet to meaningfully filter through to manufacturers of building materials. Although production and manufacturing sales increased, it was still relatively weak levels. As a result, confidence, although 5 points higher remained low at 31 index points.
According to the survey, growth in activity at the start of the building pipeline was restrained. Even though the confidence of architects and quantity surveyors edged higher, by 1 and 5 index points respectively, the underlying activity indicators remained largely unchanged at relatively low levels. “The muted growth in architect and quantity surveyor activity along with an environment of higher interest rates may cause the current improvement in residential building to stall and further depress the non-residential market” remarked Loos.
In conclusion: After slowing for the most part of 2015, the growth in the building sector regained some momentum in 4Q2015 as reflected by the 4 index point increase in the FNB/BER Building Confidence Index. Underpinning this improvement was an increase in retail sales of hardware materials and, more importantly, a noticeable increase in residential building activity. In contrast building work in the non-residential building sector slowed.
Despite the improvement this quarter, the outlook for the sector remains uncertain. “Although there is evidence to suggest that the residential market should continue to grow, albeit modestly, a faster than expected rise in interest rates may cause this to stall. In addition, pressure on consumers may weigh on hardware retailers while the weak growth in architect and quantity surveyor activity could see non-residential building activity remain low” said Loos.