April 16, 2013, 10:44 a.m. EDT
Home construction hits highest rate since 2008
By Ruth Mantell,
MarketWatch
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Construction on new U.S. homes in
March hit the highest rate in almost five years, as starts for apartments
jumped, according to data released Tuesday by the Department of Commerce.
The report pointed to an ongoing rebound in housing activity: starts in March
were up 47% from the same period in the prior year, the largest year-over-year
growth since 1992. Housing starts rose 7% in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.04 million, the highest rate since June 2008. Economists polled by MarketWatch had expected construction starts in March to rise to a rate of 933,000 from an original February estimate of 917,000. The government on Tuesday also revised up February’s starts rate to 968,000.
U.S. stock futures (GLC:SPM3) extended gains after the report and Wall Street opened sharply higher on Tuesday.
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The
apartment-building boom continues
Yes, starts are on the rise, but really it's just apartment building that's booming.
• Industrial production up on utilities usage surge
• Home construction hits highest rate since 2008
• Consumer inflation falls 0.2% in March
• Lew balks at projecting when U.S. hits debt limit
• IMF lowers world, U.S. growth forecasts
Yes, starts are on the rise, but really it's just apartment building that's booming.
• Industrial production up on utilities usage surge
• Home construction hits highest rate since 2008
• Consumer inflation falls 0.2% in March
• Lew balks at projecting when U.S. hits debt limit
• IMF lowers world, U.S. growth forecasts
Despite the construction gains, starts remain below a bubble peak of almost 2.3 million in 2006. Some economists say a long-run equilibrium level for starts is about 1.6 million, meaning there’s substantial room for construction growth to meet demands from household formation and replacement building.
Starts for buildings with at least five units rose to a rate of 392,000 in March, the highest level since January 2006, up 27% from February.
Starts for single-family homes fell 5% to a rate of 619,000.
Roofing materials sit on top of homes under
construction at the Hovnanian Enterprises Inc.'s Four Seasons housing
development in Beaumont, California, U.S., on Monday, March 4, 2013.
Regionally, starts in March rose 10.9% in the South, 9.6% in the Midwest and
2.7% in the West. But starts fell 5.8% in the Northeast. The government also reported Tuesday that building permits, a sign of future demand, fell 3.9% in March to a rate of 902,000.
Echoing that result, separate data released Monday indicated that home builders are concerned about demand. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo housing-market index fell in April, hitting the lowest level in six months, dragged down by concerns over present sales and buyer traffic.
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