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º£½ÇÊÓÆµ construction sector faces downturn ahead of Autumn Budget

The latest Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) from S&P Global showed construction output showed the industry hit its highest level for three months at 46.2

Rachel Reeves upcoming Budget has the construction industry putting plans on pause.(Image: Matthew Horwood/PA)

Business activity expectations within the construction sector have plummeted to their lowest point since late 2022, as firms maintained a pessimistic outlook ahead of the Autumn Budget.

The most recent Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) from S&P Global revealed that construction output reached a three-month peak of 46.2 – yet remained significantly beneath the crucial 50.0 benchmark that determines whether a sector is expanding, as reported by .

This represented the ninth successive month that construction dropped below this threshold, indicating a "solid rate of contraction".

The report noted that business activity expectations remained "subdued" at the second-weakest level since December 2022, with limited optimism counterbalanced by "concerns about the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economic outlook".

Nevertheless, commercial construction stood as the sole sub-sector to experience a more rapid rate of decline during September.

A shortage of new projects was identified as the primary factor constraining the sector's progress.

Employment figures contracted for the ninth month running.

'Weak business optimism' in construction

Tim Moore, economics director at S&P Global Market Intelligence, commented: "Weak business optimism, shrinking workloads and robust cost pressures once again led to lower employment numbers across the construction sector."