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Multifamily Surge Leads Housing Permits to Four-Year High

Housing permits surged another 4.5 percent in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 747,000, the highest level since September 2008, the ""Census Bureau"":http://www.census.gov/ and ""HUD"":http://portal.hud.gov/hudportal/HUD reported jointly Tuesday.

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At the same time though, housing starts fell for the third time in the last four months to the lowest level since last October.

The increase in permits was driven largely by multi-family activity; single family permits fell for the first time since last September.

Housing completions increased for the second straight month, surpassing again the level of new single family home sales.

According to the report, builders completed 600,000 new homes in March, the highest level since last September; most of the month-over-month increase ├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├óÔé¼┼ô 24,000 ├â┬ó├óÔÇÜ┬¼├óÔé¼┼ô was in the multi-family sector.

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March housing starts were reported at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 654,000 compared with 694,000 in February. Single-family starts at 462,000 were essentially flat to March's 463,000.

Single-family permits fell 17,000 to, coincidentally, 462,000 from 479,000 in February while multi-family permits improved to 295,000 from 236,000.

Starts have been basically flat for the past three years at a weak level. Only a surge in multi-family activity has kept residential construction from falling off the table.

Home sales and housing construction continue to struggle with still high unemployment and relatively weak income growth compounded by tighter mortgage lending standards.

The report on construction activity followed by one day report from the ""National Association of Home Builders"":http://www.nahb.com/ that builder confidence dropped in April. According to the National Association of Home Builders, confidence was flat in March, the period covered by HUD.

The drop in starts came despite accommodating weather which was cited as the reason starts increased in January, usually a weak month for building activity. Even though weather has remained mild in most of the country, starts have fallen.

The largest decline in single family starts came in the tornado-ravaged South, falling to 334,000 in March from 397,000 in February; single-family starts in the South dropped to 235,000 in March from 245,000 in February.

New home sales for March will be reported next week. In February, the ""Commerce Department"":http://www.commerce.gov/ reported new home sales at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 313,000, compared with 440,000 single-family completions in March.

About Author: Mark Lieberman

Mark Lieberman is the former Senior Economist at Fox Business Network. He is now Managing Director and Senior Economist at Economics Analytics Research. He can be heard each Friday on The Morning Briefing on POTUS on Sirius-XM Radio 124.
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