Groundbreaking dropped 11.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted
annual pace of 1.04 mullion units, the Commerce Department said
on Tuesday. That partially reversed April's large gain. April
starts were revised up to a 1.17 million-unit rate, the highest
since November 2007.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast housing starts falling
to a 1.10 million-unit pace last month after a previously
reported 1.14 million-unit rate.
Permits for future home construction increased 11.8 percent to a
1.28 million-unit rate, the highest since August 2007. Permits
have been above a 1 million-unit pace since July.
Home building has regained ground lost during a harsh winter and
there are signs activity will accelerate this year as tightening
labor market conditions spur strong wage gains and encourage
young adults to move from their parents' basements.
A survey on Monday showed confidence among builders vaulting to
a nine-month high in June, with measures of current sales and
buyer traffic increasing solidly.
Economists anticipate that the housing market strength will take
up some of the slack of the struggling manufacturing sector and
support economic growth this year.
Groundbreaking for single-family homes, which account for the
largest share of the market, fell 5.4 percent to a 680,000 unit
pace. Starts for the volatile multifamily segment tumbled 20.2
percent to a 356,000 unit rate.
Groundbreaking fell in all four regions, declining a steep 26.5
percent in the Northeast after April's spectacular gains. Starts
in the South, where most of the home building takes place, fell
5.0 percent.
Single-family building permits increased 2.6 percent to their
highest level since December. Multi-family building permits
soared 24.9 percent.
Permits for buildings with five units or more increased to their
highest level since January 1990.
(Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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