a man wearing a hat: LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JANUARY 06: Boris Johnson launchs the preparationss for the build work for the extension of the Tate Modern in the old oil tank of the former power station that the Tate is situated in on January 06, 2010 in London, England. (Photo by Andrew Cowie / Barcroft Media / Getty Images) LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JANUARY 06: Boris Johnson launchs the preparationss for the build work for the extension of the Tate Modern in the old oil tank of the former power station that the Tate is situated in on January 06, 2010 in London, England. (Photo by Andrew Cowie / Barcroft Media / Getty Images)

The UK construction industry has begun to recover from a nine-month slowdown, with the ‘Boris bounce’ unleashing pent-up demand for housebuilding and commercial building work.

But there are fears the coronavirus could disrupt construction supply chains and see firms put building plans on hold, threatening a fragile turnaround in fortunes.

A closely watched survey of the sector shows levels of work picking up, with more clients giving building projects the go-ahead since December’s election broke Britain’s political deadlock.

Levels of new work soared in February at their fastest pace since December 2015, while overall workloads increased for the first time in nine months.

The headline figure on the construction purchasing managers’ index reached 52.6 in February, up from 48.4 last month. Figures above 50 on the index show growth, while figures below 50 illustrate decline. The survey was carried out by IHS Markit and the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Supply.

It comes a day after a similar survey for manufacturing showed factory activity accelerating to a 10-month high last month. Analysts said reduced political uncertainty had boosted order books.

In pictures: Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak around the world (Photos) 

But IHS Markit said factories were also reporting growing supply chain issues linked to the coronavirus, which has seen large numbers of plants across China shuttered to contain the outbreak. It highlighted “sizeable raw material delivery delays, rising input costs and increased pressure on stocks of purchases.”

Companies reported also reduced demand from China, and vendor lead times — a key measure of supply chain readiness — lengthened to the greatest extent since July 2018.

Supplier delivery times fell by the most since the survey began 28 years ago, while stocks of purchases fell at the fastest rate in over seven years.

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