Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Homebuildi­ng soars 13.7% in October

- JOSH BOAK

WASHINGTON — Constructi­on of new homes climbed 13.7 percent in October, the biggest jump in a year as builders broke ground on more apartments and single-family houses. A pickup in permit applicatio­ns for single-family homes indicates building will remain firm in coming months.

The Commerce Department said Friday that the monthly gain put U.S. housing starts at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.29 million units. That is the best pace for home constructi­on in 12 months.

Housing starts have risen just 2.4 percent year-todate, largely because fewer apartment complexes are being built. Single-family house constructi­on has driven much of the growth

this year in a sign of greater demand from buyers amid a healthy job market.

But recent building trends reversed themselves somewhat in October, with most of the momentum coming from apartment constructi­on. The building of multifamil­y properties jumped 37.4 percent in October. Constructi­on of single-family houses increased 5.3 percent.

Still, the building of new homes has done little to alleviate

the growing shortage of existing homes for sale. This shortage has started to stifle the broader real estate market. Purchases of existing homes have fallen over the past 12 months, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors. The decline largely reflects that there were 121,600 fewer homes on the market during the same period, a 6.4 percent decrease that new constructi­on has been unable to offset.

“For a significan­t increase in new homes, municipali­ties are going to have to work harder to make more land available for building,” said Robert Frick,

a corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union.

Constructi­on in the South rose 17.2 percent last month, a sign the region is regaining its footing after damage from Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Home constructi­on shot up in the Northeast because of groundbrea­kings for apartments. Constructi­on also increased in the Midwest but declined in the West.

Building permits, an indicator of future constructi­on, rose 5.9 percent in October to 1.3 million.

The report showed building permits for single-family

homes improved in October to an 839,000 annualized pace, the fastest since September 2007. Constructi­on spending, which subtracted from gross domestic product in the second and third quarters, may add to U.S. economic growth over the final three months of the year on the heels of rebuilding efforts after the two hurricanes.

A gauge of homebuilde­rs’ confidence surged this month to an eight-month high, indicating optimism about the outlook amid sustained demand, boosted by the steady job market and relatively low

mortgage costs.

At the same time, the industry is dealing with a shortage of workers, higher materials prices and difficulty finding ready- to-build lots. Economists expect residentia­l constructi­on will keep expanding gradually.

Groundbrea­king on multifamil­y buildings climbed to an annual rate of 413,000; these monthly data typically experience large swings.

The number of homes authorized but not yet started rose to 152,000 in October, the most since June 2015. Houses under constructi­on in October totaled 1.1 million, the most in a decade, and singlefami­ly properties the most since July 2008.

 ??  ?? AP/KEITH SRAKOCIC Workers install a roof on a home going up earlier this year in Jackson Township, Pa. The rise in home constructi­on in October was the biggest in a year.
AP/KEITH SRAKOCIC Workers install a roof on a home going up earlier this year in Jackson Township, Pa. The rise in home constructi­on in October was the biggest in a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States