Tuesday, February 20, 2018

Home Construction Rose 9.7% in January


Housing construction got off to a strong start in 2018, which could 
help boost economic growth and ease home-price increases in the coming months.
The number of new housing units under construction rose 9.7% from a month earlier to an annual rate of 1.326 million, the Commerce Department said Friday. That marked the third increase in four months.

Builders also showed signs they are planning to ramp up construction later this year. The number of permits they lined up to build units rose 7.4% last month to an annual pace of 1.396 million.

Nonetheless, economists said the numbers suggest that 2018 will continue a trend of gradual improvement in new-home construction that will remain well below normal levels.

“This is a generational issue because we’ve fallen so far behind in supply that we’re still playing catch up,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union. “We’ve still got years to go before we see these numbers improve to normal levels.”

Housing starts numbers are volatile and can be subject to big revisions. The margin of error for the January rise of 9.7% was plus or minus 16.8 percentage points.

Economists said the report was encouraging because starts rose despite frigid January weather across many parts of the country.
More disappointing was that last month’s gains were overwhelmingly driven by an increase in multifamily starts, which tend to be especially volatile and are unlikely to remain at such high levels, economists said.
Apartment starts surged 24% in January, while construction of single-family homes rose just 3.7%. Permits for buildings with five units or more likewise were up more than 25%, while permits for single-family homes fell 1.7%.

Over the longer-term, new-home construction is picking up. Total starts rose 7.3% in the 12 months through January, while single-family starts rose 7.6% during that period.

Tendayi Kapfidze, chief economist at LendingTree, said the tax code changes could boost builder margins by 10% to 15%, which could in turn encourage them to build more homes at the low end, where profit margins are thinnest. “Home builders are able to be a little more aggressive in terms of getting out there and building homes,” he said.

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