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Tag: inventories

  • JLL: Hot Present Meets Cool Future, Posing Headwinds For Construction

    JLL: Hot Present Meets Cool Future, Posing Headwinds For Construction

    JLL released its Construction Trends and Mid-Year Outlook several days ago, updating its 2023 Construction Outlook published in March.

    The new report, with its updated set of projections, highlights several hurdles the industry faces during a time of enormous economic uncertainty. Specifically, the report examines general construction industry health, along with the state of the labor market, materials availability and overall costs.

    Focusing first on industry health, the report noted that while the field has enjoyed increased activity this year, rising interest rates and tighter lending standards have led to a slump in construction starts since June.

    A heated market is up against the growing likelihood of a cool down, leading to substantial hurdles for the industry. JLL forecasts a construction start slowdown that will extend significantly into next year, the byproduct of interest rates that aren’t anticipated to peak until late this year. Look for construction activity to differ widely from sector to sector, rendering specialization and complexity management increasingly critical in driving contractor success, the authors predict.

    At the same time, the challenge of finding and keeping labor continues to bedevil the industry. Construction faces many of the structural labor woes and high labor costs other industries confront in the post-pandemic world. Fold in declining productivity, and it’s no surprise many construction firms are doubling down on talent retention.

    Construction sectors buttressed by public spending plan to continue adding workers to their payrolls, as they scarcely miss a beat.

    On the other hand, the sectors anticipating plummeting construction starts are already beginning to pare their employee ranks.

    The big, and worrisome, picture, JLL reports, is that for the foreseeable future, construction activity per employee is expected to stay above pre-pandemic levels, while employment growth will remain stubbornly below industry requirements.

    Materials costs

    There’s good news on the materials front. Supply chain dynamics have reverted to something approaching traditional norms, while future cost hikes are predicted to be governable. Elevated lead times characterized the first half of the year, particularly in mechanical, electrical and plumbing goods. Here, materials supply is failing to keep pace with the burgeoning need for data centers and electrification.

    As they look ahead, industry prognosticators see a return to single-digit inflation. Prices of materials are predicted to continue increasing at their present moderate rate. But costs will ease further as ebbing activity results in a clearing of the current pipeline. At the same time, some materials are experiencing supply pressures.

    That is the case, for instance, with Canadian softwood, whose supply has been hurt by summer wildfires.

    Total costs

    Costs in the industry have stabilized, making for the slowest growth period since just after the emergence of Covid-19 was termed an international emergency. That has buoyed contractors’ outlooks, even while activity levels have moderated.

    Building construction starts have declined, leading JLL’s report authors to forecast active build construction to dwindle by a fifth in the first months of next year.

    At the same time, wage growth will stay elevated at a projected rate of five to seven percent, while materials costs are expected to average four percent. In addition, lead times have improved, resulting in inventories being established for more products.

    The expected slowdown – and contractors’ response to it – have precipitated a decline in total costs over the course of the summer months. JLL’s expectation is for a total cost growth of two to four percent. But it cautions that the “average total cost increases by sector will look very different.”

    Jeffrey Steele, Contributor

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  • U.S. wholesale inventories unchanged in May

    U.S. wholesale inventories unchanged in May

    Wholesale inventories in the U.S. were unchanged in May following a decline in the prior month, indicating businesses are producing or stockpiling fewer goods due to an uncertain economy. Sales in the month were down 0.2%, the government said Monday. The inventory-to-sales ratio rose to 1.41 months from 1.40 months. A year ago the ratio stood at a much lower 1.30. The ratio reflects how long it would take a company to sell all the goods sitting on warehouse shelves. The higher readings tis year suggest it’s taking longer for companies to sell their goods, a sign of a slowing economy or an excess of unsold products. Businesses are likely to respond by further reducing inventories.

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  • U.S. wholesale inventories increase 0.1% in February

    U.S. wholesale inventories increase 0.1% in February

    Wholesale inventories rose 0.1% in February and sales in the month climbed 0.4%, the government said Monday. The inventory-to-sales ratio fell a tick to 1.37 months from 1.38. A year ago the ratio stood at a much lower 1.24. The ratio reflects how long it would take a company to sell all the goods sitting on warehouse shelves. Higher inventory levels reflect softer sales as the economy slows. Businesses have trimmed production to bring inventories more in line with demand. That could also depress the economy.

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  • This record number in Nvidia earnings is a scary sight

    This record number in Nvidia earnings is a scary sight

    Nvidia Corp.’s financial results had a bit of a surprise for investors, and not on the good side — product inventories doubled to a record high as the chip company gears up for a questionable holiday season.

    Nvidia reported fiscal third-quarter revenue that was slightly better than analysts’ reduced expectations Wednesday, but the numbers weren’t that great. Revenue fell 17% to $5.9 billion, while earnings were cut in half thanks to a $702 million inventory charge, largely relating to slower data-center demand in China.

    Gaming revenue in the quarter fell 51% to $1.57 billion. Nvidia said it is working with its retail partners to help move the currently high-channel inventories.

    While the company was writing off the inventory for China, its own new product inventory was growing. Nvidia
    NVDA,
    -4.54%

    reported that its overall product inventory nearly doubled to $4.45 billion in the fiscal third quarter, compared with $2.23 billion a year ago and $3.89 billion in the prior quarter. Executives cited its coming product launches, designed around its new Ada and Hopper architectures, when asked about the inventory gains.

    In the semiconductor industry, high inventories can make investors nervous, especially after the industry had so many supply constraints in recent years that quickly swung to a glut of chips in 2022. With doubts about demand for gaming cards and consumers’ willingness to spend amid sky-high inflation this holiday season, having all that product on hand just amps up the nerves.

    Full earnings coverage: Nvidia profit chopped in half, but tweaked servers to China offset earlier $400 million warning

    Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress told MarketWatch in a telephone interview Wednesday that the company’s high level of inventories were commensurate with its high levels of revenue.

    “I do believe….it is our highest level of inventory,” she said. “They go hand in hand.” Kress said she was confident in the success of Nvidia’s upcoming product launches.

    Nvidia’s revenue reached a peak in the April 2022 quarter with $8.3 billion, and in the past two quarters revenue has slowed, with gaming demand sluggish amid a transition to a new cycle, and a decline in China data-center demand due to COVID-19 lockdowns and U.S. government restrictions.

    For its data-center customers, the new architectures promise major advances in computing power and artificial-intelligence features, with Nvidia planning to ship the equivalent of a supercomputer in a box with its new products over the next year. Those types of advanced products weigh on inventory totals even more, Kress said, because of the price of the total package.

    “It’s about the complexity of the system we are building, that is what drives the inventory, the pieces of that together,” Kress said.

    Bernstein Research analyst Stacy Rasgon believes that products based on Hopper will begin shipping over the next several quarters, “at materially higher price points.” He said in a recent note that he believes Nvidia’s numbers were likely hitting a bottom in this quarter.

    “We remain positive on the Hopper ramp into next year, and believe numbers have at this point likely reached close to bottom, with new cycles brewing and an attractive secular story even without China potential,” Rasgon said in an earnings preview note Tuesday.

    Read also: Warren Buffett’s chip-stock purchase is a classic example of why you want to be ‘greedy only when others are fearful’

    Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang reminded investors on a conference call that the company’s inventories are “never zero,” and said everyone is enthusiastic about the upcoming launches. But it doesn’t take too long of a memory to conjure up a time when Nvidia went into a holiday with an inventory backlog that included new architecture and greatly disappointed investors: Four years ago, Huang had to cut his forecast for holiday earnings twice amid a “crypto hangover” with similar dynamics to the current moment

    Investors need faith that this holiday season will not be the same, even as demand for some videogame products declines after a pandemic boom just as the market for cryptocurrency — some of which has been mined with Nvidia products — hits a rough patch. Huang said that Nvidia’s RTX 4080 and 4090 graphics cards based on the Ada Lovelace architecture had an “exceptional launch,” and sold out.

    Nvidia shares gained more than 2% in after-hours trading Wednesday, suggesting that some are betting that this time will be different. That enthusiasm needs to translate into revenue for Nvidia so that this big gain in inventories does not end up being part of another write-down at some point in the future.

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