Housing starts in US unexpectedly declined 2.5% in December

Published Wed, Jan 20, 2016 · 02:10 PM
Share this article.

[WASHINGTON] New-home construction in the US unexpectedly fell in December, indicating the industry lost some momentum entering 2016.

Residential starts declined 2.5 per cent to a 1.15 million annualized rate, from the prior month's revised 1.18 million pace, a Commerce Department report showed Wednesday. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey called for an increase to 1.2 million. Permits, a proxy for future construction, also fell on a decline in applications for multifamily projects.

Housing demand would benefit from faster wage growth and more broad-based access to credit, allowing more Americans to take advantage of low mortgage rates. The report showed a pickup last month in applications to build single-family homes, indicating construction will gradually advance in coming months.

"It's a matter of a giveback after an unsustainable pace of gains, rather than any germane deterioration," Millan Mulraine, deputy head of US research and strategy at TD Securities LLC in New York, said before the report.

"While the housing recovery remains on track, there hasn't been the kind of momentum that was expected. It's going to be a slow grind higher." For all of 2015, housing starts climbed 10.8 per cent to 1.11 million, the strongest year for construction since 2007.

Estimates for December starts ranged from 1.11 million to 1.3 million. The previous month was revised from a 1.17 million pace.

Permits decreased 3.9 per cent to a 1.23 million annualized rate last month, reflecting an 11.4 per cent slump in applications for multifamily projects. Permits for one-family dwellings climbed an annualized 740,000 units, the highest level in eight years.

Single-Family Homes Beginning construction of single-family houses fell 3.3 per cent to a 768,000 rate after surging 11 per cent in November.

Work on multifamily homes, such as townhouses and apartment buildings, dropped 1 per cent to an annual rate of 381,000. Data on these projects, which have led housing starts in recent years, can be volatile.

Three of four regions showed a decline in new home construction last month, led by a 12.4 per cent slump in the Midwest and a 7.6 per cent decline in the West.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo index of homebuilder sentiment held at 60 in January, in line with the average for all of 2015, figures showed on Tuesday. Readings greater than 50 mean more respondents reported market conditions as good. The measure of buyer traffic fell and the six-month outlook cooled.

The progress of the job market will help determine the strength in housing this year. A jump in December payrolls capped the best back-to-back years for employment since 1998-99, one reason residential real-estate sales and construction also improved last year.

Demand is also expected to advance in the longer term as more young adults who delayed home ownership - in part due to the burden of student loans - improve their finances and begin to purchase entry-level homes in a bigger way.

Borrowing costs are staying low even after the Federal Reserve began raising its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2006. The central bank has said further moves will be gradual.

Residential investment made a 0.27 per centage-point contribution to economic growth in the third quarter, when the economy grew at a 2 per cent annualized rate.

BLOOMBERG

BT is now on Telegram!

For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to  t.me/BizTimes

Property

SUPPORT SOUTH-EAST ASIA'S LEADING FINANCIAL DAILY

Get the latest coverage and full access to all BT premium content.

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Browse corporate subscription here