U.S.
housing starts, permits fall; trend points to recovery
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[December 16, 2014]
WASHINGTON, (Reuters) - U.S. housing
starts and permits fell in November, but the underlying trend remained
consistent with an improving housing market.
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Groundbreaking declined 1.6 percent to a seasonally adjustedannual
1.028-million-unit pace, the Commerce Department said onTuesday.
November's starts were revised up to a 1.045
million-unit rate.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast starts rising to a 1.04
million-unit rate from October's previously reported
1.01million-unit pace.
Housing continues to be stymied by tepid wage growth, whichhas been
far outpaced by home price increases. Higher mortgagerates are also
a constraint, although they have since declined from a peak reached
in September 2013.
But with job growth accelerating, wages are expected to pick up next
year and pull first-time buyers, especially young Americans, into
the housing market, providing a tailwind for the economy.
Last month's drop in groundbreaking was concentrated in the
single-family homes segment, the largest part of the market, which
fell 5.4 percent to a 677,000-unit rate. Single-family
starts had posted two straight months of hefty gains.
Starts for the volatile multi-family homes segment increased 6.7
percent to a 351,000-unit pace. The increase unwound some of
October's 9.9 percent drop.
Multi-family starts continue to be driven by demand for rental units
as many financially-strapped Americans shun home ownership.
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Last month, permits dropped 5.2 percent to a 1.035 million-unit pace
after two straight months of gains. That was the biggest drop since
January.
Permits, which lead starts by three to four months, have been above
the 1 million pace threshold since July.
Permits for single-family homes fell 1.2 percent to a 639,000-unit
pace. Permits for multi-family housing tumbled 11.0 percent to a
396,000-unit pace. That followed two strong months
of big increases.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Paul Simao)
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