The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Home building posts moderate 3.6% gain in May

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON >> U.S. home constructi­on rose 3.6% in May as builders battled a surge in lumber prices that have made homes more expensive

The May increase left constructi­on at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.57 million units, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday.

Applicatio­ns for building permits, looked to for indication­s of activity ahead, fell 3% in May to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.68 million units.

Housing has been one of the standout performers during the pandemic-triggered recession.

But many economists believe that the surge in home building and sales over the past year may begin to slow, especially for singlefami­ly homes.

“We expect starts to mostly move sideways over the balance of 2021,” said Nancy Vanden Houten, lead economist for Oxford Economics. “Strong demand, a need for inventory and homebuilde­r optimism will keep a floor under activity, but builders continue to face supply constraint­s that may hamper or at least postpone constructi­on.”

Builders are getting one break. Lumber prices, which surged to record levels this year, have started to come down, suggesting that a speculativ­e bubble that had developed in lumber prices is beginning to deflate.

Rising material prices and supply chain shortages were blamed for a drop in builder confidence this month The National Associatio­n of Home Builders/ Wells Fargo survey reported this week that builder confidence had declined two points to 81 in June, still a high level.

Building activity has been on a rollercoas­ter this year. The 3.6% overall gain in constructi­on starts in May followed a 12.1% plunge in April, which followed a 19.2% surge in March that pushed housing starts to an annual rate of 1.73 million units, the fastest pace since the housing boom of the mid-2000s.

For May, the 3.6% increase reflected a 4.2% increase in single-family home constructi­on to a rate of 1.1 million units and a 4% rise in constructi­on of apartments, which climbed to a rate of 465,000 units.

By region, housing constructi­on fell a sharp 22.4% in the Northeast but rose in every other region. The gains were led by a 29.9% increase in the Midwest. Constructi­on rose 3.8% in the South and 1% in the West.

The National Associatio­n of Realtors released a report Wednesday contending that there was an “underbuild­ing gap” of between 5.5 million and 6.8 million housing units because of decades of under-investment in home constructi­on.

Growth in the nation’s housing inventory has slowed significan­tly since the turn of the century with every region of the country being affected, the report said.

“The state of America’s housing stock ... is dire with a chronic shortage of affordable and available homes,” the report said, recommendi­ng that officials work to remove barriers to new developmen­t.

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A carpenter aligns a beam for a wall frame at a new house site in Madison County, Miss. Housing has been one of the standout performers during the pandemic-triggered recession, but many economists believe that the surge in home building and sales over the past year may begin to slow, especially for singlefami­ly homes.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A carpenter aligns a beam for a wall frame at a new house site in Madison County, Miss. Housing has been one of the standout performers during the pandemic-triggered recession, but many economists believe that the surge in home building and sales over the past year may begin to slow, especially for singlefami­ly homes.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States