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Friday, February 21, 2014

January 2014 Residential Permits, Starts and Completions

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Total housing starts retreated for a second month in January, to a seasonally adjusted and annualized rate (SAAR) of 880,000 units. That was 168,000 fewer units (-16.3 percent) than December’s upwardly revised 1.048 million units, and more than 20 percent below November’s peak of 1.101 million units. The single-family component contributed nearly two-thirds of the fall-off (-108,000 units, or -16.0 percent); the multi-family component declined by 60,000 units (-16.3 percent). 
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With January’s drop, the year-over-year percentage change in total starts fell back nearly to 0 percent. Single-family starts were 3.0 percent below January 2012’s levels; the multi-family component was still “in the black” with +8.3 percent.
Analysts have been debating the degree to which January’s bad weather contributed to starts’ poor showing. In our own opinion, the verdict is unclear. The Northeast, which was certainly impacted by bad weather, saw starts jump on both SA and NSA bases. The Midwest and South declined, as might be expected. However, bad weather does not explain the drop in both SA and NSA starts in the West (much of which was unseasonably warm or dry in January). 
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Completions rose modestly (+36,000 units, or 4.6 percent) in January, to 814,000 units SAAR. The increase was about evenly split between the single- and multi-family components (respectively, 17,000 and 19,000 units). Total completions were 13.1 percent above year-earlier levels. 
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The most troubling aspect of the Census Bureau’s report came from residential permits. Total permits declined by 54,000 units (-5.4 percent) SAAR in January. The vast majority of the decline occurred in the multi-family component (-46,000 units, or 12.1 percent); single-family permits fell by 8,000 units (-1.3 percent).
Although some blamed the weather for the poor showing in permits, we think that makes little sense. First of all, the biggest drop -- in both the SA and NSA data, and whether on an absolute or percentage basis -- occurred in the comparatively balmy West. Second, permits typically correspond to activity that will occur two or more months in the future. Just because January’s weather may have been unduly inclement does not mean builders expect those adverse conditions to continue.
Third, the rate of growth in permits has been trending down on a year-over-year percentage change basis since late 2012. As of January, permits were essentially unchanged relative to a year earlier. This trend is most readily apparent in the recent erosion of builder confidence. The National Association of Home Builders’ confidence index plummeted by 10 points -- the largest monthly drop in the survey’s history -- into negative sentiment territory during February.
Rather than blaming the weather, we think a more plausible explanation is the construction industry got ahead of itself in late 2013 and needs to take a breather. 
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The foregoing comments represent the general economic views and analysis of Delphi Advisors, and are provided solely for the purpose of information, instruction and discourse. They do not constitute a solicitation or recommendation regarding any investment.

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