Wednesday, October 21, 2009

News You Can Use

Economists Forecast Strong Housing Growth
Experts at NAHB conference see a turnaround occurring by mid-2010, but the way back will be long


By Craig Webb, ProSales Online

The U.S. housing market appears to have bottomed out and looks likely to return closer to normal--but not boom--levels by 2012, a group of housing economists predicted today.
Enthusiasm with several strings attached was the prevailing mood expressed in presentations prepared for the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) 2009 Fall Construction Forecast Conference. Read more.

Housing Starts Hold Steady in September
Total housing starts, expressed as a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR), came in at 590,000, according to data released today by the Commerce Department. That's 0.5% ahead of the previous month -- which was adjusted downward, from 598,000 to 587,000.
If not for the downward adjustment of August starts, the total percentage would have declined 1.3%.

There was better news for builders, and their suppliers, in the single-family front. Single-family housing starts in September were at a rate of 501,000; this is 3.9% above the revised August figure. Moreover, the August figure was revised upward, from a previously stated 479,000 to 482,000.

Compared with September of last year, total starts declined 28.2%, and single-family starts declined 8.7%. Read more.

September housing construction rises 0.5 percent
By Martin Crutsinger
Source: Associated Press/AP Online

Construction of new homes edged up slightly in September, helped by a rebound in single-family construction. However, in a worrisome sign for future housing work, applications for building permits fell by the largest amount in five months. Read more.

More Signs of Economic Recovery
The decline in consumer spending on home renovation projects is tapering off, and remodeling activity should start to pick up early next year, according to a just-released study by Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies.

The quarterly forecast pointed to several positive signs that could boost home improvement spending, causing a reversal in annual declines by the second quarter of 2010. Read more.

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