- US
housing starts jumped 22.6% in July to a seasonally adjusted 1.5 million, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. - The solid report marked the third-straight month of gains and exceeded economists expectations for an increase to 1.25 million.
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Housing construction blew past expectations, cementing the industry as one of the solid pillars of the recovery," said Robert Frick, corporate economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union.
US housing starts surged by more than expected in July, boosted by pent-up demand from the coronavirus pandemic and low mortgage rates.
Privately owned housing starts in July were at a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.5 million, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. That was a 22.6% increase from the revised June estimate of 1.22 million, the largest jump since October 2016.
The July number also smashed economist forecasts for a 1.25 million annualized rate, a roughly 2.5% increase from June.
"Housing construction blew past expectations, cementing the industry as one of the solid pillars of the recovery," said Robert Frick, corporate economist at the Navy Federal Credit Union. "A combination of low mortgage rates and pent-up demand from years of low
In addition, building permits in July came in at a seasonally adjusted rate of 1.5 million, an 18.8% increase from June and the biggest jump since 1990. They also exceeded economist expectations of a 1.33 million increase, and are now above pre-pandemic levels from February.
The
"Building starts and permits, especially in the South, point to a strong sector through the rest of the year, meaning not only more homes to buy, but more jobs from trades workers to materials makers," said Frick.
Single-family starts increase 8.2% in July at an annualized rate of 940,000, while multifamily starts surged 58.4% at a pace of 556,000. Single-family permits jumped 17% to a rate of 983,000.