The numbers: Construction on U.S. new houses fell
more than 9% in September, but a recent surge in permits suggests the
decline in so-called housing starts is just a temporary pause in a real
estate market reinvigorated by lower mortgage rates.
Housing
starts slid to an annual rate of 1.26 million las month from a revised
1.39 million in August, the government said Thursday.
The slowdown was concentrated in new buildings with five units or more that typically get rented.
Economists
polled by MarketWatch had expected starts to decline to 1.32 million
following a surprising strong gain in the prior month. In August,
housing starts hit a 12-year high.
Permits to build new houses,
meanwhile, fell about 3% to a 1.39 million annual pace. The number of
permits filed was nearly 8% higher compared to a year earlier, however.
What happened: Work on new houses slowed in all four regions, with the Northeast and Midwest experiencing the biggest declines.
Construction
of apartments, condo complexes and other projects with five units or
more sank 28% in September. That type of new construction can swing
sharply from month to month.
New construction on single-family
homes actually rose slightly to an annual rate of 918,000, marking the
highest level since the start of 2019. Single-family starts are 2.8%
higher compared to a year ago.
About three-quarters of all U.S. homes are single-family dwellings.
Big picture: Construction
has perked up following a steep decline in interest rates. A 30-year
fixed mortgage, for example, has tumbled to as low as 3.5% from more
than 5% a year earlier.
Builders still aren’t producing enough new houses to satisfy demand,
however, and they are unlikely to dramatically scale up construction in
light of fresh worries about the health of the U.S. economy.
That’s
keeping home prices higher than they otherwise would be and effectively
capping overall sales.
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