Single-Family Housing Starts Edged Up In January

Going up: A construction worker at a housing development in San Mateo, Calif., in June 2012. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Going up: A construction worker at a housing development in San Mateo, Calif., in June 2012. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Work was begun on 0.8 percent more single-family homes in January than had been started the month before, the Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development say.

And the number of single-family starts was up 20 percent from January 2012.

A 26.1 percent drop in starts, from December to January, on construction of apartment buildings and other multi-family homes dampened the news somewhat.

But looking ahead, there was a 1.9 percent increase in January from December in the number of permits issued for construction of single-family homes. The number of such permits was up 29.2 percent from January 2012.

The increase in permits, says Reuters, reinforces expectations that “the housing market will support economic growth this year.”

Also this morning, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that wholesale prices rose 0.2 percent in January from February.

 

Read original article

Single-Family Housing Starts Edged Up In January

NPR News

KTOO is the NPR member station in Juneau. NPR offers its members radio and digital stories.

Sign up for The Signal

Top Alaska stories delivered to your inbox every week

Site notifications
Update notification options
Subscribe to notifications