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A sign for a new home sold in Ashburn, Virginia. New US home construction rebounded in October after a sharp slowdown the previous month, as the key sector of the economy shows resilience amid firm buyer demand, the Commerce Department reported. Photo: AFP

Housing starts in US surge to a nine-year peak in October

US new-home construction jumped to a nine-year high in October as an outsized advance in the number of apartment projects accompanied a strong pickup for single-family housing.

Residential starts surged 25.5 per cent to a 1.32 million annualised rate, the fastest since August 2007 and exceeding the highest projection in a Bloomberg survey, a Commerce Department report showed Thursday. The increase from September was the biggest since July 1982. Multifamily-home building was up a whopping 68.8 per cent.

The figures indicate the housing market was making greater progress a month before a jump in mortgage rates. While increased hiring and healthier finances have been driving demand, a sustained pickup in borrowing costs threatens to discourage first-time buyers and become a hurdle for the industry.

“Homebuilding is in a steady recovery,” said Richard Moody, chief economist at Regions Financial Corp. in Birmingham, Alabama, who had the highest forecast in the Bloomberg survey. “The fundamentals for demand are in good shape” although “higher mortgage rates could be a potential headwind if we see further gains in rates.”

The median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg was 1.16 million, with estimates ranging from 953,000 to 1.26 million, according to the survey.

The Commerce Department said there was 90 per cent confidence that the change in sales last month ranged from an increase of 12.9 per cent to a 38.1 per cent surge, underscoring the volatility of the data. Single-family house construction rose 10.7 per cent to an 869,000 rate, the highest since October 2007.

A danger sign at the construction site of luxury row houses in Chicago, Illinois. Photo: Bloomberg

Work on multifamily homes, such as townhouses and apartment buildings, jumped to an annual rate of 454,000 from 269,000 a month earlier. Data on these projects, which have led housing starts in recent years, can be volatile.

All four regions posted gains in housing starts last month, the report showed.

Permits, a proxy for future construction, increased 0.3 per cent to a 1.23 million annualised rate. They were projected to fall to a 1.19 million pace, according to the survey median.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo index of homebuilder sentiment in November held near the highest level of the year, figures showed on Wednesday. Readings greater than 50 mean more respondents reported market conditions as good. A measure of prospective buyer traffic rose.

With investors anticipating faster expansion and inflation from President-elect Donald Trump’s policies, the yield on the US 10-year note -- a bellwether of changes in mortgage rates -- has jumped in the past week, followed by an advance in housing loan costs.

A sustained surge could further discourage first-time purchases at a time when rising values are hurting affordability. The back-up in rates would subdue residential construction, which has failed to contribute to growth for two consecutive quarters.

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