The housing market has been choked by the Federal Reserve's
most aggressive interest rate hiking cycle since the 1980s to
tame inflation. But the worst of the housing market downturn
could be over. A survey on Wednesday showed the National
Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index
increased for a third straight month in March, though
homebuilder sentiment remains depressed.
Mortgage rates, which had resumed their upward trend, could
start falling as U.S. Treasury yields have declined sharply
after the recent collapse of two regional banks sparked fears of
contagion in the banking sector. Some economists believe
financial market instability could make it harder for the Fed to
continue raising rates next week.
Starts for housing projects with five units or more shot up
24.1% to a rate of 608,000 units, the highest level since last
April. Multi-family housing construction remains underpinned by
demand for rental accommodation.
With both single- and multi-family homebuilding rising,
overall housing starts surged 9.8% to a rate of 1.450 million
units last month, the highest level since September. Economists
polled by Reuters had forecast starts rising to a rate of 1.310
million units in February. Starts dropped 18.4% on a
year-on-year basis in February.
Single-family building permits increased 7.6% to a rate of
777,000 units. They had declined for 11 straight months.
Permits for housing projects with five units or more jumped
24.3% to a rate of 700,000 units. Overall, building permits
vaulted 13.8% to a rate of 1.524 million units.
The number of houses approved for construction that are yet
to be started was unchanged at 294,000 units.
The single-family homebuilding backlog fell 3.0% to 130,000 units, but the completions rate for this segment increased 1.0% to a rate of 1.037 million units. The inventory of single-family housing under construction fell 1.7% to a rate of 734,000 units. (Reporting By Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
Messaging: lucia.mutikani.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net))