Boston Herald

U.S. housing starts rise in sign home constructi­on is stabilizin­g

- By Augusta Saraiva

U.S. housing starts increased in April, adding to evidence that residentia­l real estate is gradually recovering after a yearlong slump.

Beginning home constructi­on rose 2.2% to a 1.4 million annualized rate, according to government data released Wednesday. Single-family homebuildi­ng increased 1.6% to the highest level this year, entirely due to a jump in the West. Starts of apartment buildings and other multifamil­y projects also rose.

Applicatio­ns to build, a proxy for future constructi­on, fell 1.5% to an annualized rate of 1.42 million units. Permits for one-family dwellings, however, increased to a seven-month.

“While elevated mortgage rates and affordabil­ity concerns remain headwinds for housing, a lack of inventorie­s could support building activity over time,” Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said in a note.

Builders are taking advantage of an historical­ly low supply of existing homes for sale and some are offering financing incentives to ease affordabil­ity constraint­s amid budding demand for new houses. That helps explain why homebuilde­r sentiment currently stands at a 10-month high.

Still, prospectiv­e buyers face a number of headwinds that include only modest declines in home prices, stillhigh mortgage rates and tighter lending standards.

While Federal Reserve officials have indicated they may pause their tightening campaign as soon as next month, the extent to which rates will remain elevated is still unclear.

The rise in single-family home constructi­on reflected an almost 60% surge in the West after slumping a month earlier.

The number of homes completed dropped to a 1.38 million annualized rate. The level of onefamily properties under constructi­on slid 1.4% to 698,000.

The housing starts data will feed into economists estimates of home constructi­on’s impact on second-quarter gross domestic product. Prior to the report, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow called for residentia­l investment to subtract 0.25 percentage point from growth.

Existing-home sales data for April will be released on Thursday, while a report on newhome purchases is due next week.

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Beginning home constructi­on rose 2.2% to a 1.4 million annualized rate, according to government data released Wednesday, May 17, 2023.
Dreamstime — Dreamstime Beginning home constructi­on rose 2.2% to a 1.4 million annualized rate, according to government data released Wednesday, May 17, 2023.

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