Homebuilding bounced back in September

1 min read
84 views

US homebuilding bounced back in September, after dropping in August to the lowest levels since 2020 as mortgage rates climbed.

Housing starts, a measure of new home construction, jumped 7% above the revised August estimate. Starts rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.358 million last month, falling short of expectations of 1.38 million, according to data released Wednesday by the Census Bureau.

The number of units started was 7.2% lower than a year ago.

Single‐family housing starts, which account for most of the construction, rose 3.2% in September from the revised August figure, at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 963,000.

Building permits dropped in September, however, falling 4.4% from August’s revised number to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.473 million.

Permits were 7.2% lower than a year ago.

This story is developing and will be updated.

Read the full article here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

Execution Issues Continue To Undermine AngioDynamics Story (NASDAQ:ANGO)

Next Story

Biden would lose in match-up vs. Trump, according to CNBC survey; Israel funding has strong support

Latest from Business

Nutter Butter, are you OK?

For the past month TikTok users have been commenting on Nutter Butter’s account. “You good?” asked one. “Nutter Butter are you paying for my