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Housing Starts Decline 14.2 Percent in December
Privately-owned housing starts declined 14.2 percent in December
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,006,000, according to new statistics
from the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Single-family housing starts in December were at a rate of 794,000, a 2.9
percent decline from November's figure of 818,000. An estimated 1,353,700
housing units were started in 2007. This is 24.8 percent below the 2006 figure
of 1,800,900.
"The 14.2 percent decline in overall housing starts for
the month of December was due primarily to a 40 percent drop-off in the multifamily
sector, which tends to display significant month-to-month volatility," noted
NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. "On a quarterly basis, multifamily
production actually has held up relatively well since the peak in the early
part of 2006."
Multifamily housing starts declined 40.3 percent in December
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 212,000. However, average multifamily
starts for the final quarter of 2007 held at 321,000 units, above the averages
for each of the previous three quarters.
Overall permit issuance, which can be an indicator of future
building activity, declined 8.1 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate
of 1.07 million units in December. Single-family permits declined 10.1 percent
to a 692,000-unit rate while multifamily permits were down 4.1 percent to
376,000 units.
"Builders pulled fewer new permits and continued to work
down their inventories of unused permits toward the end of last year," Seiders
noted. "This is all with an eye to repositioning themselves for later
this year, when market conditions should warrant an increase in building
activity. NAHB's projected recovery process is contingent upon aggressive
monetary stimulus by the Federal Reserve as well as key legislative advances
in the areas of FHA reform and GSE oversight reform. A fiscal stimulus package
also is warranted to help keep the economy on track in 2008."
Regionally, combined single- and multifamily housing starts
were down by double digits in the Northeast (down 25.8 percent), Midwest
(down 30.8 percent) and West (down 19.6 percent) for the month. The South
faired the best, with only a 3.3 percent reduction in overall housing starts.
Meanwhile, housing permits were down, by lesser margins, in three out of
four regions in December. The Midwest posted a 10.6 percent decline, the
South posted a 7.8 percent decline, and the West posted an 11.6 percent decline
in overall permits for the month, while the Northeast registered a 1.6 percent
increase.
On an annual basis, year-end figures from the Commerce Department
indicate that overall housing starts declined 24.8 percent in 2007 to 1.35
million units. Single-family starts were down 28.7 percent for the year to
1.05 million units, while multifamily starts were off by 8.4 percent to 308,000
units. Overall permit issuance for new homes and apartments declined 25.2
percent in 2007 to 1.38 million units, with a 29.4 percent decline on the
single-family side to 973,000 units and a 12.5 percent decline on the multifamily
side to 403,000 units.
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