by Abbe Will Research Analyst |
Since
2007, the Joint Center for Housing Studies has produced a quarterly Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity (LIRA), which makes use of several economic
indicators that historically have had strong correlations and leads over
remodeling spending to anticipate near-term changes in the market. The Joint
Center relies on the homeowner improvement expenditure data reported in the
U.S. Census Bureau’s monthly Construction Spending Put in Place series (C-30)
to estimate and benchmark its LIRA.
On
July 1, the Census Bureau released its regularly scheduled annual revisions to the C-30, which adjusted the monthly improvement spending
estimates back two calendar years to January 2011. As seen in Figure 1, these
revisions increased estimates of home improvement spending by 6% for 2011 (from
$114 billion to $121 billion) and decreased spending over 10% for 2012 (from
$125 billion to $112 billion).
Source: US Census Bureau, Value of Private Construction Spending Put in Place (C-30).
Typically, these annual revisions are minimal and,
in the past, changes were always in the same direction as the original
estimates, often revising the whole series downward somewhat (Figure 2). This time, not
only was the magnitude of the revisions significantly larger than in recent
years, but the direction of the revisions was extremely divergent from what
could have been expected based on previous annual revisions.
Source: US Census Bureau, Value of Private Construction Spending Put in Place (C-30).
Source: US Census Bureau, Value of Private Construction Spending Put in Place (C-30).
Certainly, the extent of these revisions by itself calls for a thorough analysis and
understanding of the reasons behind such dramatic changes, but the fact that
the adjustments are at odds with other key industry data is even more
worrisome. Figure 3 compares the annual rates of change in data series that
historically correlate highly with home improvement spending (and are used as
main inputs in the LIRA) with the pre- and post-revision C-30 data. As seen in
the figure, key industry indicators including retail sales at building material
and supply stores, remodeling contractor sentiment (RMI), pending home sales
(PHSI) and single family housing starts all trended closely with the pre-revised
C-30 estimates of homeowner improvement spending since January 2011.
Sources: US Census Bureau, Value
of Private Construction
Spending Put
in Place (C-30),
Monthly Retail Trade Report and New Privately Owned Housing Units Started;
National Association of Home Builders Remodeling Market Index (RMI); and
National Association of Realtors© Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI).
At
this time, there is no obvious explanation for why the revisions to the C-30 improvements
data were so extreme this year. As part of the Joint Center’s investigation of
this issue, we will be in contact with the federal agencies involved in collecting
the survey data and developing these estimates to assess whether changes in
survey methodology or weighting procedures, for example, might explain these
large shifts. As the Joint Center reviews the underlying source data for home
improvement spending and the procedures that generate these estimates, we have
decided to forgo publication of the LIRA this quarter. The next LIRA is scheduled to be released on October
17, 2013.
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