Home Construction Aug 2009
Loan Modification Scams 2009Sept 2009 - August housing construction rises to highest level in 9 months, boosted by apartment building. Housing construction rose in August, but the results were mixed, with the large single-family sector falling for the first time in six months. The August performance added to signs that the housing industry has begun to recover from its worst downturn in decades. Still, economists cautioned that the rebound likely will be slow and tentative, given the glut of unsold homes and record levels of home foreclosures.

Last month's gains came from the construction of multifamily homes and apartments, which rose 1.5% to an annual rate of 598,000 units, the highest level since November, the Commerce Department said Thursday. That was slightly lower than the 600,000-unit pace economists had expected and it's more than 70% below the peak hit in 2006.

Applications for building permits, a gauge of future activity, rose a 2.7% in August to an annual rate of 579,000 units, slightly below the 580,000 level that had been forecast. Permits for single-family homes dipped 0.2 percent but rose for multifamily units by 15.8%.

The 1.5% rise in housing starts followed a small 0.2% dip in July. The August strength reflected a 25.3% surge in construction of multifamily units, a volatile sector that had fallen 15.2% in July. The larger single-family sector dipped 3% last month to an annual rate of 479,000 units, the first setback following five straight monthly gains.

Paul Dales, U.S. economist at Capital Economics, noted that housing starts remain 74% below their 2006 peak and predicted the housing recovery would be a very "long-winded process." Other economists said the overall gain was still an encouraging sign that the worst is over for housing.

Regionally, construction rose 23.8% in the Northeast and 0.9% in the Midwest. Activity was flat in the West and fell 2.4% in the South.

Builders cut sharply back on construction after the housing bubble burst. The weakness in housing spread to the financial sector as defaults on home mortgages soared. This all contributed to pushing the country into the worst recession in seven decades. Most economists say the overall recession has likely ended.

Builders have been ramping up because buyers want to take advantage of a new federal tax credit for first-time homebuyers. It covers 10% of a home price up to $8,000, and is set to expire at the end of November.

The National Association of Home Builders said this week that its housing market index rose in September, reflecting growing optimism in the industry about rising home sales. The trade association said its index rose one point to 19, the highest reading since April 2008.

 

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