Multi-family production at two-year high

Home News Multi-family production at two-year high

multi-family housing startsWashington D.C.—Despite production bottlenecks and rising construction costs, total housing starts, led by a strong multi-family reading, posted a solid gain in February as demand stays strong and existing inventory remains at low levels, according to the National Association of Home builders (NAHB).

Overall housing starts increased 6.8% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.77 million units, according to a report from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. Census Bureau. This is 22.3% above the rate posted a year earlier.

The February reading of 1.77 million starts is the number of housing units builders would begin if development kept this pace for the next 12 months, according to the NAHB. Within this overall number, single-family starts increased 5.7% to a 1.22 million seasonally adjusted annual rate. The multi-family sector, which includes apartment buildings and condos, increased 9.3% to an annualized 554,000 pace.

“Builders continue to start homes as the demand for new construction remains solid in a market lacking inventory of previously owned homes,” said Jerry Konter, chairman, NAHB. “However, construction costs are rising too quickly, which threatens housing affordability conditions in 2022 as interest rates rise.”

According to Robert Dietz, chief economist, NAHB, February’s pace for apartment construction was the best since January 2020. “We expect the multi-family sector to continue to show strength as the economy reopens,” Dietz said. “On the single-family front, the count of homes permitted but not started construction reached a four-month high in February, rising to 152,000. This is an indication of the ongoing supply-chain delays and cost issues that are limiting the pace of home building in many markets.”

On a regional basis compared to the previous month, combined single-family and multi-family housing starts are 28.7% higher in the Northeast, 15.3 % higher in the Midwest, 11.4% higher in the South and 11.4% lower in the West.

Overall permits decreased 1.9% to a 1.86 million unit annualized rate in February. Single-family permits remained essentially flat, falling 0.5% to a 1.21 million unit rate. Multi-family permits decreased 4.4% to an annualized 652,000 pace.

Looking at regional permit data compared to the previous month, permits are 22.7% higher in the Northeast, 8.4% lower in the Midwest, 5.5 % lower in the South and 2.1% higher in the West.

There are now 799,000 single-family homes under construction, a 28.3% year-over-year gain.

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