And there is important good news in this report. Permits are up, rising 4.1 percent to a 1.150 million rate that hits the Econoday consensus. Single-family permits are up 2.4 percent to a 711,000 rate with multi-family up 6.8 percent to 439,000.
Housing completions fell back in October, down 6 percent to a 965,000 rate that reflects lower work in the Northeast and Midwest. Homes under construction rose 0.9 percent to a recovery best 938,000 rate and are up a very strong 16.4 percent year-on-year, pointing, despite the slip in starts, to ongoing strength for construction spending, at least for October.
But the big drop in starts is definitely a negative for the near-term construction outlook, though the rise in permits points to subsequent strength.
Recent History Of This Indicator:
Multi-family units drove starts higher in the prior report though single-family starts also showed some strength. But housing starts for October, reflecting prior weakness in permits, are expected to fall 1.2 percent to a 1.162 million annualized rate. Housing permits, however, are expected to bounce back 1.1 percent to a 1.150 million rate. Ups and downs aside, this report has been mostly solid and has been signaling continued strength in construction spending.
Multi-family units drove starts higher in the prior report though single-family starts also showed some strength. But housing starts for October, reflecting prior weakness in permits, are expected to fall 1.2 percent to a 1.162 million annualized rate. Housing permits, however, are expected to bounce back 1.1 percent to a 1.150 million rate. Ups and downs aside, this report has been mostly solid and has been signaling continued strength in construction spending.
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