Some Good News for the North Texas Construction Industry

Ran across these stories today:

Commercial real estate outlook improving

Commercial property lending coming back to life

A few highlights from the articles:

- North Texas commercial real estate experts expect further recovery next year and say they hope the market will be mostly righted by 2012.

Petersen predicted “moderate economic growth next year” for the Dallas-Fort Worth area

- “The commercial mortgage-backed securities market has roared back to life,” he said. “And some community banks have also stepped up.”

- commercial property and apartment lending was up by almost a third in the most recent quarter, and the biggest jump–more than 100 percent–was for industrial buildings, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

- “If you are a developer, by the end of 2011 you need to think about building.”

- With retail construction at a virtual standstill, merchants are slowly filling up empty space – even sites that might have once been passed over. “We are filling up centers today that we couldn’t fill up in better times,”


Beyond the Dallas Morning News stories the ABC is showing the south’s BCI (Back Log Indicator) as increasing by .79 months year on year (from 5.76 to 6.55 months).  You can see the full report here.   Of course, they take the point of view that it’s falling from the July number, but I think the last few quarters are artificially inflated by all the stimulus  projects.

June Commercial Construction Contracts Down 51%

Ran across this piece of news today: Dallas Commercial Construction Contracts Fall Again in June

So is DFW just lagging the rest of the country on commercial construction?  Down 31% first quarter, Down 10% in May and now 51% for June.  Not a promising direction.

AGC – Metro Area Construction Job Report

I saw this headline pop into my RSS Reader: Houston Dropped 18,400 Construction Jobs in 12 Months ending May 2010 and was pretty amazed at the size of the drop for Houston.   So that got me curious on how the construction employment numbers are looking for our area.  In Dallas we shed 12,900 jobs year on year ending May 2010.  Percentage wise that is a bit worse than Houston (Dallas-11%, Houston-10%).

I thought I would dig a little deeper since the AGC has all the reports sitting right here and see what the trend looks like for the Dallas area.

I would say it doesn’t look great, but the last few months at least show a bit of a bottom.  Let me know what you think, does it look like the construction projects are continuing to drop, maintaining its level, or actually getting better in the DFW area?”

AGC Dallas-Plano-Irving Division employment numbers

Are You Bondable?

With all the government dollars going into construction (like the 4.7 billion dollar “funnel” project that just started), it might be a good idea for small construction companies to be bondable.  The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU) in conjuction with the Surety and Fidelity Association of America (SFAA) are trying to help out the little guys with a 10 week course on becoming bondable.

Here is the link to the release: www.dot.gov/affairs/2010/dot7410.htm

Dallas is a pilot city and the classes start here June 10th.

Are You Going to Get Paid? Ask a Construction Lawyer

We aren’t the biggest construction law firm in the DFW area, but it is funny how in our practice we get to see some industry trends developing first hand and probably even before most analysts do.  I’ve always told clients to keep up with their receivables in order to preserve their lien rights.  I’ve even gone as far as saying hey…if you don’t want to worry about deadlines just give me a monthly spreadsheet with your receivables and I can tell you which ones you have to worry about.  Usually I’m coming at it from the point of view of lien deadlines, but more and more I have another point of view.

Being an Attorney for many clients in the construction industry I get a broader industry perspective than the lone sole contractor, sub-contractor or supplier.  For instance, I usually know if residential construction projects are having more payment problems than commercial projects or vice versa.  I know what bond companies are easy to work with and which are not.

So the other day I was talking to a client about one matter when he just mentioned that he ‘may’ have another one for me.  I inquired more about it and when he was done, I told him that his ‘may’ was actually a ‘sure thing’.  His potential matter related to a specific General Contractor building an anchor store in Houston.  He was ‘promised’ that he would get paid and to just give it a month (which would have put him past his lien deadline).  What he didn’t know is the previous week I had filed a lawsuit to foreclose on a property in Dallas that the same General Contractor had built for the same retail chain.   So the odds that he would give up his lien rights and not get paid were actually pretty high.

So, yes, people can try and do liens themselves or use a online service to preserve their rights, but they give up something important (beyond probably not doing it right).  When you go to a law firm, experienced in the area of construction litigation and commercial collections, you have the added benefit of a wealth of knowledge regarding the financial viability of particular projects and General Contractors, Builders, Subcontractors and Suppliers in and around the DFW area and even in some cases, throughout the State of Texas.   Many times, we know who is paying, who is not, what jobs are having funding problems, which parties are known to be “slow pays,” “no pays,” or even continuously in litigation.  To most clients, this information is almost invaluable and is a benefit you can get from your law firm without having to spend any additional money.