Mortgage News Home

Friday August 29, 2008

Home Page   26,235 Active Members   Register Welcome, Guest    Sign In  

Home

Latest Headlines

Popular Stories

Bookmark Us

Reader Comments

SUBSCRIBE

SEARCH OUR SITE

RSS News

Mortgage Rates
  30 Yr Fix 6.40% -0.07%
  15 Yr Fix 5.93% -0.07%
  1 Yr ARM 5.33% 0.04%
  5/1 ARM 6.03% 0.04%
  30 Yr Tres 4.38% -0.01%
  Fed Prime 5.00% -0.25%
MND Features

- Wiki
- Video News
- Mortgage License Information
- Real Estate License Information
- Mortgage Content Syndication
- Mortgage Fraud
- Housing Bubble
News Archives

Submit A News Tip
or Story Idea
 

Free Subscription To News Alerts
Stay up to date on breaking news with our free News Alert Service.


Permits and Housing Starts Reflect Builder Optimism

5378 Views - Printer Friendly - Email This Story To A Friend
 
RSS COMMENTS(0) LINK HERE ADD NEWS TO YOUR WEBSITE

Home builders are growing increasingly more confident about the economy and the real estate market and that was reflected in the most recent report on residential construction in the U.S. for the month of January.

The National Association of Home Builders and Wells Fargo released their Housing Market Index (HMI) last week. This survey reflects the confidence NAHB member builders have in the present and the future of the housing market. The HMI increased from an upwardly revised figure of 33 in December to 35 this month - the highest level the index has achieved in seven months.


The HMI is a composite of three surveys that NAHB has been conducting for 20 years to assess builders' perceptions of current single family sales and their expectation of sales over the next six months on a three point scale of very low to very high, and their current assessment of buyer traffic as good, fair, or poor. Any individual or combined score over 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as good than as poor.

Two of the three component indexes also registered improvement in January. Current home sales and buyer traffic each gained three points to 36 and 26 respectively; sales expectations for the next six months were unchanged from December at 49.

NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders said of the index, "The same factors that were evident at the end of 2006 continue to hold true in today's housing market - improving affordability measures, strengthening consumer assessments of home buying conditions, and an upswing in applications for mortgages to buy homes. Builders are starting to see that the worst is behind them and that buying conditions have improved to the point that greater optimism is warranted."

The U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development; released their monthly report on new residential construction in December. The Census Bureau report lags the NHBA survey by a month but still indicates that builders are putting down hard cash to back up their perceptions which were evident even in December that life is getting better.

Housing permits were issued (by areas that require them) at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,596,000, 5.5 percent above the rate reported in November but still a substantial 24.3 percent below the estimated rate of 2,107,000 reported in December 2005. The bulk of this improvement, however, was in multiple family housing. Permits for projects with two to four units were up over 27 percent while large developments - over 5 units - increased 17.3 percent. Single family permits were only up 1.2 percent.

Actual housing starts in December were at an annual rate of 1,642,000, 4.5 percent above revised November figures but still behind the December 2005 pace by 18 percent. No figures were available for two to four unit starts (for some reason they never are) but projects of 5 units or more were up 30.6 percent from November. Single family houses increased 4.1 percent.

There are a lot of permits outstanding for which construction has not commenced but this number has declined almost every month since August when 2,297,000 permits were outstanding. The number at the end of December was 1.882,000. This figure is confounded, however, by permits that may have been cancelled, abandoned, or have expired.



Story Views: 5378 | Permalink

Story Tools



Email This Story To A Friend

Subscribe To News Alerts
 

Related Tags

Select a Tag for more information related to that Tag. (View All Tags)
 
home builders national association of home builders housing starts building permits

 

Comments (0)

Post Comment


No Comments At This Time

Post A Comment

Please fill out the form below to submit a comment.

Name: 
(Required - Type Anonymous or Use First Name Only if Private)
Email Address: 
(Not Required So No Fake Emails Please.)
URL or Weblog:
(Leave Blank If You Don't Have One - Use http://)
Comments: 
(Please keep comments on topic. No HTML Allowed. No Advertisng.)
Please Note: Due to Comment Spam, all comments are reviewed by hand. Most comments will appear shortly after submission but it may take up to 12 hours to appear. If you would like to come back, click here to Bookmark the page.
PLEASE DO NOT USE ALL CAPS


Character Count =     (5000 Character Limit)

If you would like to leave a longer comment, please submit your comments in 5000 character increments and we will merge your comments.
Notify me via email when my comment is approved.


Note: Please don't bother spamming. All submissions are reviewed by our our editorial staff. Comment spam and irrelevant links will not be approved.

 




NEW VIDEO
(1 New Today)
NEW! Waiting for a Housing Rebound
Lazear on the U.S. Economy


Reader Comments (More)
Simply amazing, Wake up people. People are loosing their homes because of loss of jobs. Work out what, I look at financials all da...
Read
OK, so now they are beginning to make progress on the people who need help retaining their homes...beginning, mind you, just begin...
Read
NO matter what anyone sasy, this downward pressure on home prices is a GOOD THING. Why? Because: 1) Home Values were SUPERHEATED a...
Read
Home - Contact - Sitemap - Disclaimer - Privacy Statement - Advertising
All Content Copyright © 2003 - 2008 Brown House Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form without the express written permission of MortgageNewsDaily.com is prohibited.