The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Home starts at 14-year high as rates stay low

December starts rise 5.8% following 9.8% jump in November.

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U.S. home constructi­on starts rose for a fourth-straight month in December as builders responded to robust demand.

WASHINGTON — U.S. home constructi­on starts rose for a fourthstra­ight month in December to the best pace since late 2006 as builders responded to the robust demand for single-family housing.

Residentia­l starts climbed by 5.8% to a 1.67 million annualized rate, according to government data released Thursday. That topped all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists that had a median forecast of 1.56 million and compared with an upwardly revised 1.58 million rate in November.

The full year saw a total of 1.38 million starts, with single-family constructi­on climbing to 991,200, both the highest since the mid2000s, according to the report, which is published jointly by the Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

Meanwhile, applicatio­ns to build, a proxy for future constructi­on, increased 4.5% in December to a 1.71 million annualized rate that was also the best since 2006.

What it means

The figures are the latest sign of the housing market’s strong rebound. The Federal Reserve’s ultra-easy monetary policy has helped push mortgage rates to record lows that are attracting more potential homebuyers and underpinni­ng historical­ly strong demand.

The report showed single-family starts climbed 12% to a 1.34 million pace, another post-2006 high. Multifamil­y starts, which tend to be volatile and include apartment buildings and condominiu­ms, eased to 331,000.

Other factors

The pandemic has also driven a surge in demand for properties with more space for families to work and learn at home. With lean inventorie­s, builders have been rushing to meet demand. A measure of homebuilde­r sentiment eased in January but remains near a recent record.

More details

Constructi­on climbed in three of four regions, led by a 32.1% surge in the Midwest.

The Northeast was the only region in the country that fell, suffering a decline of 7.2%.

Constructi­on rose 13.6% in the Midwest, 11.2% in the West and 1.3% in the South.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Residentia­l starts climbed by 5.8% to a 1.67 million annualized rate, according to government data released Thursday. That topped all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Residentia­l starts climbed by 5.8% to a 1.67 million annualized rate, according to government data released Thursday. That topped all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

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