US housing starts rise to five-month high in broad increase
Advance is broad-based, with both single-family home starts and apartment projects rising at year’s end
本文由AI辅助翻译
NEW residential construction in the US rose to a five-month high in December, as homebuilders boosted production to take advantage of lower borrowing costs.
Housing starts increased 6.2 per cent to an annual pace of 1.4 million homes in December, indicated figures released Wednesday (Feb 18) by the government, which were delayed by the federal shutdown last autumn. That beat all estimates in a Bloomberg survey.
The advance was broad-based, with both single-family home starts and apartment projects rising at year’s end.
The stronger construction numbers suggest that builders were growing more confident at year’s end even as they continued to sell off a bloated inventory of new houses.
In December, building permits, which point to future construction, rose 4.3 per cent to an annualised pace of 1.45 million, the highest since March, government data show. Single-family permits fell slightly, however. BLOOMBERG
Decoding Asia newsletter: your guide to navigating Asia in a new global order. Sign up here to get Decoding Asia newsletter. Delivered to your inbox. Free.
Share with us your feedback on BT's products and services
TRENDING NOW
Abandoned ‘Titanic’, failing ‘ancient towns’: Why China’s tourism boom leaves white elephants behind
BlackRock said to be in exclusive due diligence for Capri by Fraser China Square
‘Very low chance’ that US-Iran deal reverts energy flows to South-east Asia through Hormuz: Bloomberg Economics
Tiger Beer lines up new products as Singapore operations’ role shifts from brewing to innovation