2007 Western Trends Survey
by the Reeves Journal Staff
January 4, 2008
Residential Slows; CII Grows
2007 was certainly an interesting year. There’s no need to once again recap
how developments on the finance, mortgage and supply/demand fronts are
affecting the housing markets and, by extension, the construction trades, in
the West and elsewhere.
The results of the 2007 Reeves Journal
Western Trends Survey reflect an almost startling slowdown of activity for
plumbing contractors in new residential construction. That’s the bad news. The
good news is that more than 40 percent of respondents to this year’s edition of
the survey said the level of Commercial/Industrial/Institutional plumbing in
our region has posted increases over the past year.
Here is a taste of this year’s results:
Residential Snapshot
 |
During the past 12 months, has Residential construction in your area...
|
|
Respondents to this year’s
survey painted a fairly gloomy picture of the residential construction market.
Nearly half—49 percent—of respondents reported a decrease in residential
construction in their areas during 2007, compared to the 33 percent of
respondents to the 2006 survey.
For 2007, this leaves 36
percent of respondents reporting residential construction in their areas stayed
the same and only 15 percent reporting an increase. The good news is that among
the 15 percent who said residential construction has increased during 2007, the
majority said they’d seen increases of 20 percent or more. The bad news is that fully 52 percent of
respondents who reported a decrease in residential construction said the
drop-off is 25 percent or more.
The rather grim performance of the residential construction sector
in the west during 2007 was foreshadowed by the 2006 survey, in which a total
of 71.6 percent of respondents predicted performance on the residential front
would “stay the same or continue to slow.”
Predictions
for 2008 on the residential side are still grim, in that fully 82 percent of
this year’s respondents predict 2008 residential construction will stay the
same or decrease.
Rosy Commercial Picture
 |
| During the past 12 months, has
Commercial/Industrial/Institutional (CII) construction in your area... |
|
While the residential side
of the construction business faltered for plumbing contractors during 2007,
good news was found on the Commercial/Industrial/Institutional side.
Some 41 percent of
respondents to this year’s survey reported seeing an increase on CII
construction in their respective areas. This is eerily similar to the
predictions made by respondents to last year’s survey, in which 40.7 percent
said they were anticipating an increase for 2007.
Other figures on the CII side reported for the 2007 survey were
almost spot-on reflective of the predictions made by respondents in the 2006
survey. For example, 52 percent of 2007 respondents reported CII construction
had stayed the same in their markets. During 2006, 45.6 percent predicted CII
would be about the same in 2007. Similarly, only 7 percent of 2007 respondents
said CII construction had decreased during the year. Back in 2006, however,
13.9 percent were expecting a decrease in CII construction.
This year’s respondents, when asked to predict CII performance for
2008, expressed cautious optimism, with 34 percent predicting an increase
during 2008, 50 percent opining CII work would remain at 2007 levels, and 16
percent predicting 2008 CII work would see a decline.
Who and How Much?
 |
| What
do you estimate your 2007 total gross annual sales to be? |
|
Service and repair
contractors were well-represented in the 2007 Western Trends Survey in that
some 43 percent of respondents claimed that type of work as their specialty.
New construction (CII) contactors made up 21 percent of respondents and 36
percent was made up of a combination of new construction (residential) and
remodeling and renovation specialists.
A respectable
cross-section of businesses was represented this year in that 24 percent of
respondents said their estimated 2007 gross sales were on track to be less than
$250,000 and 20 percent revealed their companies were going to post gross sales
of $5 million or more for the year. The median gross sales figure (half of
respondents reporting more; half reporting less) was $800,000.
It was a better year, gross sales-wise, for some respondents.
Among the 39 percent who expect to see an increase in gross sales for 2007,
nearly all expect the increase to be slight, reporting “somewhat higher”
figures. About the same number—40 percent—said gross sales for 2007 would be
“about the same” as 2006, while only a combined 21 percent said 2007 gross
sales would be either, “somewhat lower” or “much lower” than the year-ago
period.
In predicting gross annual sales performance for the upcoming
calendar year 2008, 51 percent said they anticipated bringing in “about the
same” gross sales figures as 2007, while a combined 36 percent said their gross
sales for 2008 would be either “somewhat higher” or “much higher” than 2007.
Only 13 percent said they were anticipating gross sales for 2008 to be less
than 2007’s final numbers.
Methodology
For this year’s survey,
1,500 questionnaires were mailed to active, qualified Reeves Journal contractor subscribers who reported holding the job
title of Owner/Partner, President/Officer or Manager. Questionnaires were
mailed Sept. 21 and 184 usable forms had come back by Oct. 23, the deadline to
return the questionnaires. This produced a 12 percent response rate.
To order your very
own copy of the entire 2007 Reeves Journal Western Trends
Survey results, which includes far more interesting data than could ever be
presented here, visit the Clear Seas Research Web site at www.clearseasresearch.com, and click your way
to the “Syndicated Studies” page. Or call Beth McGuffin at (248) 786-1619.
|