Housing starts plunged 9.0% but permits rose 6.3% in September according to a New Residential Construction report by the commerce department.
The Econoday Consensus estimate for starts was 1.18 million units at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR). The consensus missed by a mile. Starts came in at 1.047 million units.
Permits rose to 1.225 million (SAAR), far ahead of the consensus estimate of 1.165 million units.
Econoday calls the report “Deceptively Solid”.
Highlights
Starts are mixed but permits are up in what is a deceptively solid housing starts & permits report. Starts plunged what looks like a shocking 9.0 percent in September, to a 1.047 million annualized rate. But the drop is tied entirely to the volatile multi-family component where starts fell a massive 38 percent in the month to a 264,000 rate. The more important single-family component is up sharply in its own right, 8.1 percent higher to a 783,000 rate.
Permits for both components are up with single-family 0.4 percent higher to a 739,000 rate and with multi-family, in contrast to the big decline in starts, up 17 percent to 486,000. Together, permits are up 6.3 percent to a 1.225 million rate that far exceeds Econoday’s top estimate of 1.182.
By region, year-on-year starts are down the most in the Northeast (minus 32 percent) and the South (minus 16 percent) while permits are up the most in the Northeast (plus 13.9 percent) and West which is a focused region for the nation’s builders (plus 13.3 percent). The negative headline aside, there are more positives in this report than negatives, positives that include gains for single-family starts and permits in what are pluses for new home sales.
Housing Starts 1960 – 2016
Private Single-Family Housing Starts 1960 – 2016
Private Single-Family Housing Starts 1960 – 2016 Percent Change
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