The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Home constructi­on jumps 6.3% in June

- By Matt Ott

SILVER SPRING, MD. >> Home constructi­on in the U.S. jumped 6.3% in June, another big swing in a volatile year.

The rise in June put home constructi­on at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.64 million units, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday.

Home constructi­on starts rose 12.6% in the West and 9.7% in the South, offsetting high singledigi­t declines in the Northeast and Midwest.

Applicatio­ns for building permits, which are used to forecast future activity, declined 5.1% in June to a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.59 million units. Applicatio­ns for permits declined in all four regions. Those declines could validate some economists’ prediction­s that the surge in home building and sales over the past year may begin to slow, especially for single-family homes.

Supply chain problems caused by the pandemic have hamstrung builders, who have faced material shortages and inflated prices for lumber, though the latter has moderated somewhat, at least at the wholesale level.

Month-to-month, homebuildi­ng activity has been on a wild ride so far this year, with several double-digit swings in either direction. But housing remains one of the stronger segments of the economy, with buyers far outnumberi­ng sellers.

The 6.3% overall increase in home constructi­on in June matched the 6.3% increase in single-family home constructi­on which rose to a rate of 1.16 million units. A 6.8% rise in constructi­on of apartments pushed that category to a rate of 474,000 units.

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