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With infrastructure leading the charge, Canada’s construction sector remains positive in Q2 2024, according to the latest RICS/CIQS Construction Monitor.
Overall sentiment in Canada’s construction industry remains positive in the second quarter, and similar to that of the first three months of the year, report the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) and Canadian Institute of Quantity Surveyors (CIQS) in Canada Construction Monitor Q2 2024. Construction activity was indexed at +23 for Q2, barely changing from the +24 of Q1. Of note, this figure is similar across construction firms of all sizes, indicating a consistent picture across the sector.
According to the research presented in the report, current workloads continue to grow and, like many other construction sectors across the globe, infrastructure leads the way on sentiment toward growth. Within infrastructure projects, the strongest areas of growth appear to be energy and transportation.
New housing project starts, prices and sales remain a little more subdued, but the RICS-CIQS dataset is designed to capture ongoing development work rather than new shovels in the ground or completion transactions. Meanwhile, the office and retail construction sectors continue to indicate negative trends.
Looking at credit conditions, at the time the questionnaire was open, the Bank of Canada (BoC) had only made one cut in interest rates but since survey field work closed, it sanctioned a further quarter point move. Moreover, what appears to be a dovish pivot by the BoC is fuelling the suspicion that further monetary accommodation will come through quicker than markets had previously anticipated. This promotes a more hopeful outlook.
“The Bank of Canada has forecasted an economic growth increase for the remainder of 2024 and into 2025, which should result in us seeing a continued momentum in the infrastructure sector,” stated Sheila Lennon, chief executive officer of CIQS. “The interest rate cut in July, along with market stipulating that further cuts in 2024 are forthcoming, should lower mortgage rates, making it more financially palatable for builders and owners to take on new mortgage debt loads in both the residential and non-residential sectors to help stimulate an increase in workload in these sectors.”
Both skills and general labour shortages are the two critical factors identified by respondents as holding back market activity. In each case, around two-thirds of respondents highlighted such scarcities.
Looking at this issue in a little more detail, it is the area of skilled trades where the survey suggests the recruitment challenges are most severe. That said, around one-half of contributors indicated problems in sourcing quantity surveyors while 40 per cent mentioned project managers.
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