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Downswing in Single-Family Market Deepens in April
The downswing in the single-family housing market deepened in April while a
bump up for the month in the extremely volatile multifamily market lifted total
housing starts 8.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.032 million
units, according to figures released by the Commerce Department last week. Total
starts were down 30.6 percent from a year earlier.
Single-family housing starts dropped 1.7 percent for the month to a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 692,000 units, the lowest monthly production rate since
January 1991 and 42.2 percent below April 2007.
"It's no surprise that the single-family housing market continues to deteriorate
since our surveys of builder confidence and market expectations have been hovering
in a historically low range for the past nine months," says NAHB President
Sandy Dunn, a home builder from Point Pleasant, W.Va. "Congress and the Administration
must act now to kick-start housing and lift the overall economy."
Multifamily housing starts rose 36.0 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual
rate of 340,000 units in April after dropping 35.1 percent to a 250,000-unit pace
the month before. The pace of multifamily construction was 17.6 percent above
April 2007.
Total building permits rose 4.9 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual
pace of 978,000 units. Total permits were down 34.3 percent from a year earlier.
Single-family permit issuance rose 4.0 percent to a pace of 646,000 units for
the month. The pace was marginally lower than the first quarter average of 647,000
this year and 40.1 percent below April 2007.
The rate of multifamily permit issuance was up 6.8 percent to 332,000 units
for the month. The pace was 19.2 percent below a year earlier.
Regionally, starts of new homes and apartments were up in the Midwest, South
and West by 24.4 percent, 3.6 percent and 18.5 percent, respectively. Housing
starts were down in the Northeast by 12.7 percent. All four regions reported a
pace of construction substantially lower than a year earlier.
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