The Palm Beach Post

U.S. home constructi­on falls 3.7 percent in April

- By Paul Wiseman

WASHINGTON — U.S. builders broke ground on fewer apartment buildings last month, pushing overall home constructi­on down 3.7 percent from March.

The Commerce Department said Wednesday that housing starts fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.29 million in April, lowest since December. Apartment constructi­on tumbled 12.6 percent to 374,000. Constructi­on of single-family homes blipped up 0.1 percent to 894,000.

Still, housing starts are up 10.5 percent from April 2017 on a 7.2 percent increase in single-family homes, and a 19.1 percent surge in apartments.

Home constructi­on has grown steadily since the housing crash hit bottom in 2012. The pace of homebuildi­ng is still below its long-run average of about 1.5 million a year, which has led to a shortage of homes on the market. Home builders are struggling with higher prices for lumber and other building materials and a shortage of skilled laborers.

A healthy job market is giving Americans the confidence to shop for houses. Millennial­s are increasing­ly moving out on their own to buy their own homes

Demand for housing is strong despite an uptick in mortgage rates: The rate on the benchmark 30-year, fixed-rate home loan is 4.55 percent, up from 4.05 percent a year ago.

“We expect housing starts to continue to gain ground through 2018, supported by positive fundamenta­ls such as low unemployme­nt and healthy wage increases, which are expected to offset higher mortgage rates,” Leslie Preston, senior economist at TD Economics, wrote in a research note. “At the same time, tight inventorie­s and rising prices will continue to support homebuildi­ng.”

Building permits, an indicator of future constructi­on, fell 1.8 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted 1.35 million.

 ?? JASON JANIK / DALLAS MORNING NEWS ?? The pace of homebuildi­ng is still below its long-run average of about 1.5 million a year, which has led to a shortage of homes on the market.
JASON JANIK / DALLAS MORNING NEWS The pace of homebuildi­ng is still below its long-run average of about 1.5 million a year, which has led to a shortage of homes on the market.

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