US housing starts slowed in January as builders pulled back on single- and multifamily home construction amid growing worries over mortgage rates and unsold homes.
New residential construction decreased 9.8% to an annualized pace of 1.37 million last month, slipping after a nearly 16% surge in December, according to government data released Wednesday. That trailed the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg, who expected an annualized 1.39 million pace.
The slowdown followed an abnormally large gain the previous month which some economists attributed to seasonal adjustments. Single-family starts fell 8.4% to an annualized rate of 993,000 in January amid exceptionally cold weather across the country, marking the first drop since October. Multifamily starts, meantime, declined 13.5% to an annualized 373,000.
Economists and publicly traded home builders expect the new-home market to see only modest growth this year, dragged down by
Home contractors thus far have kept luring customers with sales incentives,
The number of new homes under construction fell 1.4% in January, continuing a downward trend over the past year. Home completions, meantime, rose in January for the first time since August.
Building permits, a leading indicator of future construction, edged higher in January, while single-family permits were unchanged.
Across the US, starts fell in the South, Midwest and Northeast, while the West registered an increase. The new residential construction data are volatile, and the government report showed 90% confidence that the monthly change ranged from a 22.3% decline to a 2.7% gain.
The National Association of Realtors will provide a look at the previously owned home market on Friday, when it releases monthly data on existing-home sales.