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Economy Title: Housing Starts in U.S. Rose in April to Highest Since 2008 May 18 (Bloomberg) -- Builders in April broke ground on more U.S. homes than anticipated as buyers took advantage of a tax credit before its expiration. Housing starts rose to a 672,000 annual rate last month, the highest since October 2008 and up 5.8 percent from March, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. Building permits, a sign of future construction, dropped to the lowest level in six months. Demand that was bolstered by a government incentive of as much as $8,000 helped reduce the number of unsold new houses to the lowest level since 1971 and encouraged builders to take on more projects. The slump in permits indicates that sustained gains in the weakest part of the economy will require job creation and fewer foreclosures that have pushed down prices. Inventories are already pretty low, so you can throw that in the plus column for builders, Jennifer Lee, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, said before the report. Were going to see some giveback in starts as so much of the demand was built up due to government assistance that expired at the end of April, she said. Building permits fell 12 percent to a 606,000 annual rate in April. Housing starts were revised up in March to a 635,000 annual pace. Starts were forecast to rise to a 650,000 annual rate, according to the median projection of 77 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Estimates ranged from 620,000 to 700,000. Todays report included annual revisions from the Commerce Department. Permits were projected to hold at a 680,000 annual rate, matching the pace in March that was the highest since October 2008, according to the survey median. April Last Year Starts rose 41 percent in April from the same month last year, the biggest year-over-year gain since 1994, while permits increased 16 percent. Construction of single-family houses increased 10 percent to a 593,000 rate in April, while permits fell 11 percent. Work on multifamily homes, such as townhouses and apartment buildings, dropped 19 percent to an annual rate of 79,000. Three of four regions had an increase in starts last month. The gain was led by a 24 percent jump in the Northeast. Starts rose in the South and Midwest and fell in the West. The tax credit for first-time homebuyers, extended in November to include some current owners, required contracts be signed by April 30 and settled by June 30. Sales of new homes surged in March by the most since 1963, while purchases of existing homes rose for the first time in four months. The jump in sales brought the number of new houses for sale down to 228,000, the lowest since March 1971, allowing builders more room to begin projects even as they compete with foreclosed homes coming back on the market. Home Foreclosures Home repossessions rose to a record level in April while foreclosure filings dropped, signaling mortgage lenders are working off a backlog of seized properties, RealtyTrac Inc. data showed last week. Homebuilders turned less pessimistic in May, a report showed yesterday. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo confidence index rose to the highest level since August 2007, data from the Washington-based group showed. As the effects of the tax credit fade, a sustained recovery in housing will depend on a pickup in the labor market. Employment has increased four straight months, including an April gain that was the biggest in four years. At the same time, economists project the unemployment rate will end the year above 9 percent, according to a Bloomberg survey this month. Pulte Group Inc., the largest U.S. homebuilder by revenue, is among companies waiting for signs that the improvement in housing will last beyond the end of the government assistance. The U.S. housing industry is finding, and may have already found, a bottom, but thats different from saying that a recovery is at hand, Richard J. Dugas, Pultes chairman and chief executive officer, said on a conference call with analysts on May 5. Sales at Lowes Businesses benefiting from steadying demand include Lowes Cos., the second-largest U.S. home-improvement retailer, which posted a first-quarter profit as sales advanced. The Mooresville, North Carolina-based company raised its full-year earnings forecast. Caution remains, but a growing sense of comfort has more consumers planning and executing discretionary projects and purchases, Chief Executive Officer Robert Niblock said on a conference call yesterday. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread |
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