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				 Groundbreaking declined 2.0 percent to a 
				seasonally adjusted annual pace of 1.07 million units, the 
				Commerce Department said on Wednesday. Decembers' starts were 
				barely revised at a 1.09 million-unit pace and January's reading 
				was in line with Wall 
				 
				Street's expectations. 
				 
				Starts have now been above the one million-unit mark for five 
				straight months. Compared to January last year, groundbreaking 
				was up 18.7 percent. 
				 
				Sluggish wage growth and a shortage of homes on the market 
				stymied housing last year, even as the broader economy was 
				accelerating. 
				 
				But a turnaround in housing is expected this year as a rapidly 
				tightening labor market pushes up wages and encourages more 
				young adults to move out of their parents' basements and set up 
				their own homes. 
				 
				Already in the fourth quarter, household formation was 
				accelerating, breaking above the one-million mark that usually 
				is associated with a fairly healthy housing market. 
				 
				Although much of the gain in households went into rentals, that 
				would still be a boost to housing starts this year. 
				 
				Single-family homes groundbreaking, the largest part of the 
				market, dropped 6.7 percent to a 678,000-unit pace. Starts in 
				this segment had hit their highest level since early 2008 in 
				December. 
				 
				Projects in the Northeast, which was slammed by a storm during 
				the month, dipped 3.5 percent, with all the drag coming from the 
				multi-family segment. 
				 
				Groundbreaking in the volatile multi-family homes segment rose 
				7.5 percent to a 360,000-unit pace. With the rental vacancies at 
				their lowest level in more than two decades, 
				 
				multi-family starts are likely to push higher this year. 
				 
				In January, permits for future home construction dipped 0.7 
				percent to a 1.05 million-unit pace. Permits have been above a 1 
				million-unit pace since July. 
				 
				Single-family permits fell 3.1 percent last month. 
				 
				Multi-family permits rose 3.6 percent after tumbling 5.2 percent 
				in December. 
				 
				((Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)) 
				
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