By Martin Crutsinger
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. home construction rebounded a better-than-expected 3.9% in August with the strength coming in apartment construction.
The August increase left home construction at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.62 million units, 17.4% above the pace of a year ago, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. Housing starts had fallen 6.2% in July.
The August strength came in a 21.6% jump in construction of apartment units which offset a 2.8% fall in construction of single-family homes.
Applications for building permits, a good sign of future activity, rose 6% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.73 million units. However, with demand still strong and homes for sale still in short supply, the outlook for housing construction remains solid for the rest of this year.
"Higher input costs and shortages remain headwinds for builders. But still-low inventories should be a positive for activity as these constraints ease," said Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist for High Frequency Economics.
Construction activity was up in all parts of the country except the West, which saw a 21.1% decline Construction surged 167.2% in the Northeast but that jump came after a 54.4% plunge in July. Construction starts were up 11.4% in the Midwest and 1.4% in the South.
A monthly survey of builder sentiment by the National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo showed sentiment inched up to 76 in September, ending a three-month decline. The index remains far below the record reading of 90 last November.
"The single-family housing market has moved off the unsustainably hot pace of construction of last fall and has reached a still hot but more stable level of activity," said Robert Dietz, chief economist for the home builders.
- Posted September 23, 2021
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Home construction up 3.9% in August after July drop
headlines Oakland County
- Adoption Day celebrated
- Whitmer signs bipartisan bill to hold drug companies accountable in cases of wrongdoing
- Nessel celebrates bill signing for drug immunity repeal
- Michigan Department of Attorney General staff members recognized by national association
- Damon J. Keith Center's 8th Biennial Lecture spotlights Rhonda Williams, engaging audience on race & justice through poetry and music
headlines National
- Does artificial intelligence discriminate in child neglect case assessments?
- ‘Nuclear verdicts’ and ‘litigation tourism’ are partly why these state courts are top ‘judicial hellholes,’ report says
- How an Eight-Figure Verdict Helped Spur Transformation in This Legal Department
- Nearly 25% of Law Schools Plan to Use JD-Next Admission Test
- Court grants review in federal employee’s filing deadlines case
- The morning read for Friday, December 8