News

Housing starts fell overall in the Midwest (-37.4%), South (-4%), and West (-9.5%). Completions, Permits Fall Newly constructed homes were completed in December at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of ...
Housing starts in the U.S. slid 11% in August to the lowest level since June 2020. Lack of supply is one reason home prices have yet to fall substantially. And with less progress from builders, a ...
Housing inventory in May was up by more than 30% compared with last year and in some cities, homes for sale soared past ...
November housing starts declined 1.8% M/M to 1.289M, missing the 1.340M consensus. That compared with 1.312M in October (revised from 1.311M), according to U.S. Census Bureau figures released on ...
Housing starts increased 5.7% to a 1.36 million annualized rate after downward revisions to prior months, according to government data released Thursday. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey ...
The number of housing starts tumbled in April, an indication the housing market is still taking a hit from the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes. The number of new private housing units ...
Housing starts decreased 0.5% last month to a 1.35 million annualized rate, according to government data released Oct. 18, after a big rebound in construction in August. Housing Starts Fall as ...
Homebuilders say housing starts will fall even further in 2023. NAHB HMI hits lowest level since August 2012. October 18, 2022, 10:16am by Brooklee Han. News > Real Estate.
Housing starts across Canada came in at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 214,155 units, a 3.3% drop from the month before, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said Tuesday.
US housing starts slowed in January as builders pulled back on single- and multifamily home construction amid growing worries over mortgage rates and unsold homes. New residential construction ...
The seasonally adjusted annualized rate of housing starts fell to 231,468 units from a revised 267,140 units in November, the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) said. Economists had ...