The numbers show that builders cut back on new projects in July, which is why the number of new homes built dropped 6.8% from the previous month.
The number of home starts dropped from 1.33 million in June to 1.24 million per year, the government said Friday. That many homes would be built in a year if they were built at the same rate every month like they were in July.
It wasn’t as fast as Wall Street thought it would be, at 1.34 million per month. All of the numbers have been changed to account for the seasons.
The number of home starts dropped to its lowest level since May 2020. Besides the pandemic, the number of new homes being built was the lowest it had been since March 2019.
In recent months, the rate of building has been slowing down. This is because builders are having a harder time dealing with higher financing costs and higher mortgage rates, which make people less likely to buy homes.
Building new homes is 16% less than it was a year ago.
The overall number went down because of a big drop in single-family building, even though multifamily starts went up.
The number of building permits, which show that new buildings will be built, dropped 4% to 1.4 million.
Important facts: Builders sharply slowed down the building of new single-family houses but kept speeding up work on multifamily units.
In July, starts on single-family homes went down 14.1%, while starts on apartments went up 11.7%.
The speed at which builders worked was different across the country. In the Northeast, home building went up 42.6%, but it went down everywhere else. In the Northeast, the number of single-family houses being built dropped by 27.1%, which suggests that builders were putting more effort into making townhomes and apartments.
Lets for single-family homes dropped 0.1% in July, and lets for multiple homes dropped 12.4%.
In general, housing starts are a very unstable set of numbers. But the numbers show that builders are cutting back because they think buyers aren’t as interested.
People are still not buying even though mortgage rates are much lower than they were a year ago and the number of homes for sale is going up.
New home sales are being hurt by this, and builders have been having a hard time selling the houses they’ve made. As of August, a third of home builders were lowering prices to attract buyers, and almost two-thirds were giving incentives like lowering mortgage rates.
What do they mean? “The drop in July was caused only by single-family starts, which more than cancelled out an increase in multifamily starts,” CIBC Economics’ Ali Jaffery wrote in a note.
He also said that the weakness might not last long. “Even though today’s miss and the recent slowdown in starts, the outlook for homebuilding is getting a little better as interest rates are about to go down,” Jaffery said.
“Higher rates have had the most negative effects on the housing market, and building has pretty much stopped for the past two years, making it look like there is a national housing shortage,” he said. “The housing market will be the first to benefit from the gradual drop in interest rates. This is because builders will respond by releasing more homes on the market.”
However, Richard de Chazal, played by William Blair, said that the big drop in July was partly due to bad weather from Hurricane Beryl. He also said that “activity outside this effect is also consistent with a slowdown in the housing market.”
He wrote, “Higher mortgage rates are a major factor that continues to make housing less affordable. However, home prices have not yet risen significantly, and current homeowners are still hesitant to list their properties, which would increase the number of homes for sale.”
In the past few weeks, mortgage rates have gone down a lot. However, de Chazal said that this is “accompanied by concern about the state of the economy, and this uncertainty is itself dampening activity.” “Once again, the [Federal Reserve] continues to see proof that higher interest rates are slowing growth. Today’s report will be more proof that [monetary] policy is tight and needs to start loosening up now that inflation is consistently falling.”