Total private residential construction spending decreased
slightly from the revised August and newly released September figures to a
seasonally adjusted annual rate of $326.9 billion in October 2013 according to
Census estimates. The current reading is a 0.6% decrease from the prior month
and 17.8% higher than a year ago.
Today’s release included September and October data for
construction put in place. The September data release was delayed by the
government shutdown. The September reading was a 1.7% increase from August and
10.3% higher than a year ago.
Total private residential construction spending was at a
market low point of $228.5 billion in June 2009. Although spending improved for
all categories, the figures are well below their respective peaks. Since market
low points, total private residential construction spending is up 43.1%:
single-family 86.9%, multifamily 163.6% and improvement-related spending 17.1%.
Single-family spending registered a decrease of 0.6% for the
month. The the home improvement category saw a decrease of 1.2% for the month.
The multifamily category saw a healthy increase of 2.2%.
For October, on a 3-month moving average basis, single and
multifamily spending continued to experience improvements over the course of
2013. Single-family spending increased by 13.9% while multifamily increased by
22.3%. Remodeling decreased 2.9% on a 3-month moving average basis.
Spending continues to improve for all categories, but
remains well below their respective peaks. The data show a slowdown from the
prior month for single-family and improvements that are reflective of the soft
patch the housing sector entered in the fall. In spite of this month-over-month
slowdown, the data show significant improvements in residential construction
spending for all categories from the prior year. In fact, builder confidence
remains solid.
Source: Eye
on Housing
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