In January, there was a decrease in the construction of single-family homes in the United States. However, with mortgage rates becoming more favorable and homebuilder confidence on the rise, there are signs that the US housing market, impacted by the recession, may be stabilizing.
According to the Commerce Department’s report on Thursday, the rate of single-family housing starts, which represent the majority of home construction activity, declined by 4.3% to reach 841,000 units annually, when adjusted for seasonal variations. Additionally, there was a significant decrease of 27.3% compared to January of the previous year in single-family homebuilding activity.
Single-family building permits saw a decline of 1.8%, reaching a rate of 718,000 units, whereas permits for housing projects with five units or more increased by 0.5%, reaching a rate of 563,000 units. Overall, building permits experienced a slight increase of 0.1%, totaling a rate of 1.339 million units.
The number of approved houses awaiting construction grew by 0.7% to 291,000 units. Although there was a 4.3% decrease in the backlog of single-family homebuilding, amounting to 132,000 units, the completion rate for this segment saw a rise of 4.4%, reaching a rate of 1.040 million units.
Source: Fordaq.com