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UK Construction industry growth slows as Brexit delays investment

Investment delays caused by Brexit hampers construction industry growth

A Survey indicates Brexit has caused banks to tighten their belts in the lending department, hindering the UK property market.

A leading property organisation announced on Thursday that political uncertainty is impeding the Construction industry’s rate of growth in the second quarter, as a result of delayed investment.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveryors (RICS) released their rather disappointing quarterly survey last week

The pace of growth in Britain's Construction Industry slowed over the second quarter as investment was delayed by uncertainty over Brexit and the general election, a leading property body reported on Thursday.

The quarterly survey from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) showed a reversal from the first quarter, which saw growth accelerate at its strongest pace since last year’s referendum on leaving the European Union.

A net balance of 21 per cent respondents reported an increase in total workload in the second quarter, down from 27 per cent recorded in the previous quarter, RICS said.

The private commercial and industrial segments felt the sharpest slowdown.

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The UK property market has been one of the most prominent casualties of the Brexit vote, with many developers tempering construction plans to reduce the risk on the books and given widespread concern that companies will rent less space.

Banks have tightened lending criteria as well, making it tougher for smaller builders or those with limited funds to start new projects.

The UK RICS Construction and Infrastructure Market survey showed that financial constraints, due to economic uncertainty driven largely by Brexit and the subsequent election, was noted as the most significant impediment to building activity.

The survey said 79 per cent of all respondents cited it as a concern, marking the highest level in four years. Other reasons included difficulties with access to bank finance and credit and cash flow and liquidity challenges.

"Economic and political uncertainty appear to be weighing on sentiment, but all things considered, current conditions and year-ahead workload expectations are holding up rather well relative to the longer-term trend," said Jeffrey Matsu, Senior Economist at RICS.

"Given the ongoing nature of Brexit negotiations, it remains to be seen what impact this will have on financial conditions," he added.

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