Tuesday , April 23 2024
Home / The Angry Bear / Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

Summary:
Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak The data on housing construction this month was mixed. While starts rose, their 3 month average, at 1.511 million annualized, was the lowest since September through November 2020. Meanwhile total and single family permits both declined, both to the lowest since June 2020: This year I’ve also been looking at the record number of housing units that had permits, but had not yet been started. These have been at 50 year highs, and distort the economic signal from permits, because it is construction itself that is the actual economic activity. And here, the evidence is mixed. From the long term point of view, both housing units permitted but not started and housing

Topics:
NewDealdemocrat considers the following as important: ,

This could be interesting, too:

NewDealdemocrat writes The bifurcation of the new vs. existing home markets continues

NewDealdemocrat writes Initial jobless claim Zzzzzzzzzz . . . .

NewDealdemocrat writes Industrial production for March is positive, but the overall trend remains flat

Bill Haskell writes Can local governments make it a crime to sleep outside if no inside space is available?

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

The data on housing construction this month was mixed. While starts rose, their 3 month average, at 1.511 million annualized, was the lowest since September through November 2020. Meanwhile total and single family permits both declined, both to the lowest since June 2020:

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

This year I’ve also been looking at the record number of housing units that had permits, but had not yet been started. These have been at 50 year highs, and distort the economic signal from permits, because it is construction itself that is the actual economic activity. And here, the evidence is mixed.

From the long term point of view, both housing units permitted but not started and housing under construction continue at record peak levels:

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

But a shorter term view shows that units not yet started have been flat since March, and housing under construction has increased only 2% since April:

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

Historically, housing permitted but not yet started has typically peaked only shortly after permits. Housing under construction has peaked with a longer delay:

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

We appear to be very close to (housing under construction) or even slightly past (housing not yet started) the inflection points for both of these metrics.

For the past two months I have emphasized that “Housing under construction is the ultimate coincident marker of housing economic activity. Once that begins going down, housing’s contribution to the economy is negative in real time.“ We appear to be close to, but not quite at, that point.

With that in mind, here are single family permits (blue, left scale) vs. housing under construction (red, right scale) since the latter statistic started in 1970:

Housing: permits and average starts decline, while construction remains at peak

Historically a recession has usually followed within a year of single family housing permits down 25% from their peak, as they are now. In several cases (1969, 2001) the recession had already started. There are several exceptions, notably 1966 and 1984, when either large fiscal stimulus (Vietnam war and Great Society spending) or interest rate reversals occurred. At the moment neither of those are in prospect.

At the same time, with the sole exception of the 2020 pandemic lockdown recession, construction – an even smoother metric than single family permits – has always peaked at least 6 months before the onset of recession, with a median time of 18 months, and as much as 47 months; and has declined at least 6.5%, and as much as 34%, with a median decline of 20% from peak.

So, permits are telling us that we are likely heading for recession, while actual housing under construction is telling us, by no means yet.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *