Homebuilders are ramping up new-home construction at the fastest pace
in more than five years, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday.
Construction of single-family homes and apartments in November rose
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.09 million, a 23 percent
increase over October’s pace. It marks the fastest pace since February
2008.
Broken out, housing starts on single-family homes surged nearly 21
percent in November, the fastest rate since December 2007. Apartment
construction jumped 26 percent.
"Single-family and multifamily starts are at five-year highs,
providing additional evidence that the recovery is here to stay," says
David Crowe, chief economist for the National Association of Home
Builders. "We hit a soft spot this fall when interest rates jumped and
the government closed down, but mortgage rates still remain very
affordable and pent-up demand is helping to boost the housing market. We
expect a continued steady, gradual growth in starts and home sales in
2014."
Meanwhile, overall permits — a gauge for future building activity —
dropped 3 percent in November, mostly attributed to the volatility in
apartment construction, the Commerce Department reports. Permits for
single-family homes rose 2.1 percent.
Regionally, home construction increased the most in the Midwest and
South, rising 41.7 percent and 38.5 percent, respectively, in November.
Home construction also ticked up by 8.8 percent in the West, but
declined by 29.4 percent in the Northeast.
Housing inventories remain tight, with inventories of homes under construction hovering at a four-and-a-half-year low.
Daily Real Estate News |
Thursday, December 19, 2013

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