Housing
starts tumble in February, weather likely a factor
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[March 17, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. housing
starts plunged to their lowest level in a year in February likely as
harsh weather kept builders at home, a temporary setback for the housing
market recovery.
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Groundbreaking tumbled 17 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual
pace of 897,000 units, the lowest level since January 2014, the
Commerce Department said on Tuesday.
January's starts were revised up to a 1.08 million-unit pace from
the previously reported 1.07 million-unit rate.
February's decline pulled starts below the one million-unit
threshold for the first time since last August. Economists polled by
Reuters had forecast groundbreaking at a 1.05 million-unit pace in
February.
Snowy and cold weather conditions gripped much of the country in the
second half of February. Harsh weather, which weighed on retail
sales in February, is likely to be a drag on first-quarter growth.
Housing starts were down 3.3 percent compared to February last year.
Groundbreaking fell in all four regions, plunging 56.5 percent in
the Northeast to their lowest level since January 2009.
Starts in the Midwest dropped 37 percent to a year low. In the West,
groundbreaking activity fell 18.2 percent. Starts in the South,
where most of the home building takes place, slipped 2.5 percent.
But the step back in housing starts is likely to be short-lived. A
rapidly tightening labor market is expected to push up wage growth
and encourage 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.
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While much of the gain in households will go into rentals, that will
still be a boost to housing starts this year.
Last month, single-family homes groundbreaking, the largest part of
the market, declined 14.9 percent to its lowest level since last
June. Groundbreaking for the multi-family homes segment dived 20.8
percent.
In February, permits for future home construction increased 3.0
percent to a 1.09 million-unit pace, the highest level since last
October. Permits have been above a 1 million-unit pace since July.
Single-family permits fell 6.2 percent last month to a nine-month
low. Multi-family permits surged 18.3 percent.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
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