June Housing Starts: Still Sluggish
A sluggish first half of 2019 indicates that builders have so far not been as willing or able to put up as many new homes as the strong economy and milder summer weather might otherwise suggest.

A sluggish first half of 2019 indicates that builders have so far not been as willing or able to put up as many new homes as the strong economy and milder summer weather might otherwise suggest.
June was the fifth consecutive month in which single-family starts fell from the prior year. A sluggish first half of 2019 indicates that builders have so far not been willing or able to put up as many new homes as the strong economy and milder summer weather might otherwise suggest. A dearth of affordable land and labor continue to weigh heavily on housing starts, headwinds that sustained low mortgage interest rates and a strong job market haven’t overcome. The housing market moves slowly, and as the direct challenges faced at the start of the year – including a prolonged government shutdown and a late-2018 spike in mortgage rates – fade more fully into the rearview mirror, the back half of 2019 will start to look better. Already in today’s figures, there’s a year-over-year increase in total housing starts, including multi-family — up from a fairly weak June 2018. Construction payrolls were up in June, and the jump in housing permits in May indicates more starts on the horizon — although permits fell again in June.