Updated
Updated · HousingWire · Jul 17
U.S. Housing Starts Hit 1.427 Million as Permits Fall 3% Near Cycle Lows
Updated
Updated · HousingWire · Jul 17

U.S. Housing Starts Hit 1.427 Million as Permits Fall 3% Near Cycle Lows

3 articles · Updated · HousingWire · Jul 17

Summary

  • June housing starts rose to a 1.427 million annualized rate, up 19% from May and above estimates, but the gain came almost entirely from a sharp rebound in multifamily construction.
  • Single-family starts slipped 0.2% to 895,000, while single-family permits fell 2.4% to 871,000, helping pull total permits down to 1.367 million and keeping them near cycle lows.
  • That split suggests builders are still cautious about future projects as new-home demand has struggled to grow, with sales largely moving sideways for about 9.5 years outside the COVID spike.
  • Builders have supported sales with sub-6% mortgage offers, keeping new-home sales around 2019 levels even as existing-home sales remain weaker.

Insights

Why are some US regions booming with new homes while others are falling further behind?
Amidst high vacancy rates, is the US building its way into a new apartment oversupply crisis?
Will this housing surge finally make homeownership and renting affordable for average Americans?