housing market downturn is over. The sector has been the biggest causality of the Federal Reserve's aggressive interest rate hiking campaign. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate is averaging just above 6%, a sharp retreat from the average of 7.08% in early November,
according to data from mortgage finance agency Freddie Mac. A survey on Wednesday showed confidence among homebuilders surged to a five-month high in February, though it remained at depressed levels. The rise in sentiment was the largest since June 2013. Starts for housing projects with five units or more fell 5.4% to a rate of 457,000 units. Multi-family housing construction remains underpinned by demand for rental accommodation.
With both single- and multi-family homebuilding declining,
overall housing starts dropped 4.5% to a rate of 1.309 million
units last month, the lowest level since June 2020. Economists
polled by Reuters had forecast starts would fall to a rate of
1.360 million units in December. Starts declined 21.4% on a
year-on-year basis.
Single-family building permits dropped 1.8% to a rate of
718,000 units, while those for housing projects with five units
or more rose 0.5% to a rate of 563,000 units. Overall, building
permits gained 0.1% to a rate of 1.339 million units.
The number of houses approved for construction that are yet
to be started increased 0.7% to 291,000 units. The single-family
homebuilding backlog decreased 4.3% to 132,000 units, but the
completions rate for this segment increased 4.4% to a rate of
1.040 million units.
The inventory of single-family housing under construction
fell 1.1% to a rate of 752,000 units.
(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Paul Simao)