Housing starts

RECENT NEWS
Rock Products  Nov 30  Comment 
Nationwide housing production fell 10.6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 529,000 units in October as builders awaited word on whether an important home buyer incentive would be extended,
FX Street  Nov 19  Comment 
In October, both US housing starts and permits dropped for the second consecutive month, while the consensus was looking for a slight increase. Housing starts fell by a sharp 10.6% M/M from an upwardly revised 592 000 to 529 000, while a figure of...
FX Street  Nov 19  Comment 
Despite the weakness in the Dollar today, U.S. Equity markets could not get on track for a rally because of a bad housing starts report. This morning’s decline in U.S. Housing Starts capped gains throughout the day although the markets were able...
Stock Blog Hub  Nov 18  Comment 
In October, Housing Starts fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of just 529,000, a 10.6% decline from September and down 30.7% from a year ago.  That puts housing starts at their lowest level since April, and takes a lot of steam out of the...
FX Street  Nov 18  Comment 
This morning’s decline in U.S. Housing Starts is weighing on U.S. equity markets at the mid-session. Traders are beginning to question stock valuations given the current weak state of the economy. A break through 1100.00 in the December E-mini...
The Mess That Greenspan Made  Nov 18  Comment 
That was quite a shocker this morning from the Census Bureau when, after many months of leveling off at, albeitly, historically low levels, they reported(.pdf) a plunge of 10.6 percent in housing starts last month along with a drop of 4.0 percent...
TheStreet.com  Nov 18  Comment 
Housing starts drop unexpectedly in October -- and just when we thought we were out of the woods, the modest comeback in real estate faces new skepticism.
BusinessWeek  Nov 18  Comment 
Wall Street Journal  Nov 18  Comment 
After suffering a bit of diffidence after the October housing starts number came in much worse than expected, the risk hungry alpha-hunters and the safe-haven seekers are fighting it out for control of the direction of financial markets today.
The Swamp Report  Nov 18  Comment 
New U.S. housing starts in October unexpectedly fell to their lowest level in six months, weighed down by a sharp decline in new construction. Despite or perhaps "to spite" expectations for 600,000 new units, housing starts dropped 10.6 percent to...
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TOP CONTRIBUTORS

Housing starts is a closely-watched indicator of the health of the home construction industry. Homebuilding is a major component of the overall economy due to all its size and its linkages with finance, basic materials, home furnishings and appliances, employment and overall growth.

Source

The Census Bureau, together with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) jointly report on new residential construction each month. The report has three components: Building permits, housing starts and housing completions. See [[1]]

Image:starts.png


Discussion

  • Housing starts is a measure of the number of privately-owned new housing units that began construction in the reporting month. It is usually reported at the seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR). The most recent peak in starts was 1.8 million units in November 2006. In February of 2008 the SAAR was 1,065,000. (These figures include all housing types except mobile homes/manufactured housing.)
  • Before a housing unit is built a building permit is issued. In a sense, building permits are a leading indicator of how many starts there will be in a month or two. In February 2008 the SAAR for permitted units was 978,000, some 7.8% below the revised January rate.
  • Housing completions tells us how many of the homes that were permitted and started have been finished. This measure doesn’t get much attention by the media or most investors. As of February 2008 completions were at the SAAR of 1,208,000, which is about 8.8% below January and 26% below the rate one year earlier.


Note

In general, and for a variety of reasons, starts are usually about 2.5% less than permits and completions are about 4.0% less than starts. The greatest variability is in the multifamily sector, where starts have been 22.5% less than permits (mostly due to reclassification to single-family) and completions have been 7.5% less than starts.

--Jim737 09:06, April 1, 2008 (PDT)

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