In housing construction, the last domino still refuses to fall: Travelin’ Man edition – by New Deal democrat [First, a blogging note: I will be traveling for the next week and a half. I’ll keep posting the data, but the posts are likely to be brief, and may be a day late. On days when there is no data, I will probably not post at all.] When it comes to housing construction, I’ve been waiting for the last domino to fall. Once again in July, it didn’t. Total housing starts rose 3.9%, but are -19% below their peak. Permits rose 0.1%, but are 22% below their peak. Units under construction, which is the “real” economic activity, rose 0.4% and is slightly, as in -2.7%, off its peak: Single family permits are the most leading and least noisy
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In housing construction, the last domino still refuses to fall: Travelin’ Man edition
– by New Deal democrat
[First, a blogging note: I will be traveling for the next week and a half. I’ll keep posting the data, but the posts are likely to be brief, and may be a day late. On days when there is no data, I will probably not post at all.]
When it comes to housing construction, I’ve been waiting for the last domino to fall. Once again in July, it didn’t.
Total housing starts rose 3.9%, but are -19% below their peak. Permits rose 0.1%, but are 22% below their peak. Units under construction, which is the “real” economic activity, rose 0.4% and is slightly, as in -2.7%, off its peak:
Single family permits are the most leading and least noisy data point. They were essentially flat, and both starts and permits are off about -25% from their respective peaks. Single family units under construction declined all of 5,000, and are -18.4% below their peak:
With the huge increase in the prices of houses after the pandemic, action shifted to multi-family units. Permits and starts for these were virtually unchanged last month. While permits are down -33% and starts are down -25% from their respective peaks, multi-family units under construction made yet another new all-time high:
The pace of construction for these multi-family units has barely slowed down at all:
Historically you have needed about a -10% decline in housing under construction before a recession actually began. Once again in July, the final domino – multi-family units under construction – did not fall. I suspect no recession will begun until it does.