Austin American-Statesman

After months of decline, U.S. housing starts jump

June gain of 8.3% marks strongest building pace since February.

- Housing

U.S. homebuilde­rs ramped up constructi­on in June to the fastest pace in four months, led by surges in the Northeast and Midwest.

Housing starts climbed 8.3 percent in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.22 million, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. The gain ended three straight monthly declines and marked the strongest pace of building since February. Home constructi­on has risen 3.9 percent year-to-date, but that slight increase has been unable to make up for the decrease in existing homes being listed for sale.

The June housing figures point to healthy demand that new constructi­on alone has been unable to satisfy. Fewer existing homes are being listed for sale, while purchase prices for newly built homes have surged at a pace more than six times wage growth. As a result, more Americans are rushing to purchase homes but are struggling to do so because of a lack of supplies and higher costs.

Builders also face higher costs for land and materials, putting a limit on just how much constructi­on can occur.

“Steady gains in constructi­on are expected over the next year, supported by still-strong fundamenta­l demand for housing,” said Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets. “But acting as a bit of a roadblock are problems that the builders face: rising lumber costs and shortages of labor and lots to build on, which will boost pricing.”

So far this year, builders have turned their attention toward single-family houses and away from rental apartments. Starts of single-family houses have risen 7.9 percent, while constructi­on of multifamil­y buildings has slipped 4.2 percent.

Housing starts jumped a stunning 83.7 percent in the Northeast and 22 percent in the Midwest, growth that is unlikely to be sustained. The government’s home constructi­on report can be volatile on a monthly basis. Sales edged up in the West but

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