Housing Starts Decline Again in September
WASHINGTON – In an ongoing effort to reduce the inventories of unsold homes, the nation’s builders further reduced new housing production in September, according to numbers reported by the U.S. Commerce Department. The Commerce Department indicated nationwide housing starts declined 6.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 817,000 units, the slowest building pace since early 1991.

“Builders are doing all they can to bring supply and demand back into balance by limiting new production and offering substantial incentives to prospective buyers,” said National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) Chairman Sandy Dunn, a home builder from Point Pleasant, WV. “Unfortunately, the heavy toll that today's financial-market woes are taking on consumer confidence is a major impediment to getting housing back on track as an engine of economic growth, and additional government help most likely is needed to help stimulate new sales activity.”

“While lower than generally expected, today's numbers are not surprising in light of our latest builder surveys and evidence of persistently high inventories of new and existing homes, weakening home prices, falling payroll employment and declining consumer sentiment,” noted NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. “With the impacts of the record-breaking housing contraction now spilling over to other key sectors of the economy and weighing heavily on financial markets, an additional economic stimulus package — including substantial measures to spur home buying and limit foreclosures — is the best chance we have to limit the severity of recession.”

Total housing starts fell 6.3% to an 817,000-unit rate in September following a substantial downward revision to the August number. Single-family starts declined 12% to a rate of 544,000 units, which is the slowest pace of new-home production since August of 1982. Meanwhile, multifamily starts rose 7.5% to 273,000 units, partially offsetting a big decline in the previous month.

The Northeast and West each posted double-digit declines of 21% and 16.8%, respectively, while the Midwest and South each posted modest gains of 5.6% and 0.5%, respectively.

National Association of Home Builders
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