Builders started construction on new homes in the U.S. at a pace of
1.22 million in March, the Commerce Department said Thursday. This
represented a 22% decrease from a revised 1.56 million in February, but was 1.4% higher than a year ago.
It’s the biggest decline since March 1984.
Permitting activity, however,
slowed down less drastically. Building permits for privately-owned
housing units were authorized at a seasonally-adjusted rate of 1.35
million. That was 6.8% below the revised pace of 1.45 million set in
February, but 5% above last year’s rate.
Economists polled by MarketWatch had projected housing starts
to occur at a 1.29 million pace and building permits to occur at a rate
of 1.25 million.
What happened: Housing starts and permitting both fell to the slowest pace since last July.
The decrease in permitting activity was driven entirely by a
12% drop in permits issued for single-family units. Permits for
multifamily buildings, duplexes, triplexes and quadplexes increased
between February and March.
Meanwhile, the slowdown in new construction projects was led by
multifamily buildings. Multifamily starts plummeted by more than 32%,
while single-family starts only decreased 17.5%.
Regionally, the Northeast experienced the most pronounced
decrease in overall new-home construction with a 42.5% decline, almost
double what was seen in the South, West and Midwest. However, the
Midwest noted the largest decline in single-family starts, while new
construction of one-family homes actually increased in the West.
The big picture: This report is indicative of
what can be expected in terms of housing data in future months as a
result of the slowdown in economic activity caused by the COVID-19
pandemic.
However, coronavirus only started to become a major factor in
the latter half of March.
As a result, the housing sector is poised to see coronavirus
hit reflected in the data in an even bigger way in the months ahead.
“Starts could well sink to half this level (0.6 million) in April, as
the [National Association of Home Builders] housing market index plunged
by a record 42 points, four times more than the next worst month,” Sal
Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a research
note Thursday.
This marks a major shift from the beginning of the year when record-breaking permitting activity suggested a building frenzy for later in 2020. Overall, housing starts are now expected to dip 9.3% this year, according to the latest forecast from Fannie Mae
US:FNMA,
even though the housing market has seen a major dearth in the supply of homes.
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