WASHINGTON – May 18, 2010 – Nationwide housing starts rose 5.8 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 672,000 units in April as the deadline for an important homebuyer tax incentive arrived, according to figures released today by the U.S. Commerce Department.
“While some of the starts activity noted in today’s report reflected homes for which buyers had just signed a contract at the tail-end of the tax credit program, the rest was probably tied to builders replenishing their inventories in preparation for the post-tax credit era,” says Bob Jones, Chairman of the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB). “That said, builders are maintaining a cautious attitude with regard to new building as the economy and housing markets slowly recover.”
On the down side, building permits, an indicator of future building activity, slid 11.5 percent in April to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 606,000 units. It reflected a 10.7 percent decline on the single-family side and a 14.7 percent decline on the multifamily side.
“The drop-off in building permits in April indicates that builders are working down the inventory of permits pulled in the previous month and taking care not to get ahead of the market,” says NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. “Builders also continue facing difficulty in obtaining project financing, which will limit the pace of a housing recovery.”
Single-family housing starts surged 10.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 593,000 units in April, the strongest rate since August 2008. Meanwhile, multifamily starts posted an 18.6 percent decline to a 79,000-unit rate, offsetting a big gain posted by that sector in the previous month.
Three out of four regions posted solid gains in new housing production in April. Combined single- and multifamily starts rose 23.9 percent in the Northeast, 16.7 percent in the Midwest and 7 percent in the South. The West registered a 13.3 percent decline.
Conversely, permit issuance was down in three out of four regions in April. The Northeast posted a 7.4 percent decline, the South registered a 14.3 percent decline and the West posted a 16 percent decline. Permit issuance remained unchanged from the previous month in the Midwest.
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