Housing activity – starts and permits – posted strong results in September as the single-family segment made gains across most of the country while multifamily housing appears to be trending flat. Total housing starts rose to a 1.415 million annual rate from a 1.388 million pace in August, a 1.9 percent increase. The September gain is the fourth rise in the last five months since hitting an April low.
The dominant single-family segment, which accounts for almost 80 percent of new home construction, rose 8.5 percent for the month to a rate of 1.108 million. Starts of multifamily structures with five or more units tumbled 14.7 percent to 295,000. From a year ago, total starts are up 11.1 percent with single-family starts up 22.3 percent and multifamily starts down 17.4 percent.
Among the regions in the report, total starts rose in three of the four regions. The Northeast led the gainers with a 66.7 percent surge while the South, the largest region by volume, rose 6.2 percent, and the West gained 1.4 percent for the month. The Midwest fell 32.7 percent. For the single-family segment, the Northeast again led with a 20.7 percent rise while the South increased 17.7 percent and the West added 1.6 percent for the month. The Midwest had a 16.4 percent drop.
For housing permits, total permits jumped 5.2 percent to 1.553 million from 1.476 million in August. Total permits are 8.1 percent above the September 2019 level. Single-family permits were up 7.8 percent at 1.119 million, the highest rate since March 2007 while permits for two- to four-family units fell 15.4 percent and permits for five or more units increased 1.0 percent to 390,000. Combined multifamily permits were 434,000, down 0.9 percent for the month and 19.2 percent from a year ago. Overall, single-family permits are showing persistent strength since the April low while multifamily permits are essentially trending sideways (see first chart).
Single-family permits rose in all four regions in the report, with the South up 6.0 percent, the West posting a 9.8 percent rise, the Midwest gaining 6.6 percent and the Northeast jumping 20.3 (see second chart). From a year ago, the South is up 22.2 percent, the West is 28.1 percent higher, the Midwest gained 17.7 percent and the Northeast rose 47.9 percent. All four regions are at or near multi-year highs (see second chart).
Single-family home construction activity has recovered sharply since the April low as lockdown restrictions that impacted both construction workers and potential customers were eased. Mortgage rates are near all-time lows, providing support for the recovery though lending standards have tightened amid the policy-induced economic malaise.
Housing is one of the areas that may be experiencing structural change. There appears to be sustained marginal demand for less dense suburban and rural housing as urban dwellers, primarily renters, seek alternative housing. This trend could be boosted if businesses implement permanent work from home policies, to make employees happy but also to cut down on high-cost commercial real estate, especially in high-density, high-cost cities.
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