Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. housing starts slump 12.3% in June

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WASHINGTON — U.S. homebuilde­rs sharply curtailed the pace of constructi­on in June as housing starts plummeted 12.3 percent.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that housing starts fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.17 million from 1.34 million in May. June’s pace of constructi­on was the lowest since September 2017.

Housing starts plunged 35.8 percent in the Midwest and declined less severely in the Northeast, South and West.

Permits, an indicator of upcoming constructi­on, also declined 2.2 percent in June from the previous month.

Still, the drop-off in housing starts might only reflect the volatile nature of the government’s monthly constructi­on report, rather than the beginning of a downward trend.

For the first half of the year, a steady job market and a shortage of existing homes for sale has bolstered housing starts. Home constructi­on has climbed 7.8 percent year-todate.

Homebuilde­rs are also relatively confident that the expansion will continue. The National Associatio­n of Home Builders/Wells Fargo builder sentiment index declined slightly to a reading of 68 in June. Any reading above 50 signals growth.

But builders also see reasons for concern. They face cost pressures from a lack of available land and constructi­on workers, as well as from higher commodity prices from the tariffs announced by President Donald Trump.

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