Posted on 08/19/2003 4:38:18 PM PDT by Starwind
U.S. home starts hit 17-year high in July
Tuesday August 19, 5:01 pm ET
By Eric Burroughs
(Updates with market close)NEW YORK, Aug 19 (Reuters) - U.S. home builders cranked up new construction to a 17-year high in July as quickly rising mortgage rates prompted consumers to buy sooner rather than later, a report showed on Tuesday, the latest sign of the economy's brightening outlook.
In a separate report, the University of Michigan's survey showed consumer sentiment dipped during the first half of August as Americans remain worried about job security. Sentiment has essentially remained flat for three months after bouncing back from lows before the Iraq war.
Yet economists and Federal Reserve officials have said with spending making up a little more than two-thirds of the economy, what matters is whether consumers are opening their wallets when their confidence is shaky.
And so far consumers keep shopping, even through the most widespread power outage in U.S. history. Weekly sales at chain and department stores stayed brisk and suggested retail sales are in for another strong month.
"Don't watch what people say, see what they do. And what they do is really impressive," said Alan Ruskin, research director at 4Cast Ltd. in New York.
With the upbeat economic news pouring in during the past two months, economists have busily hiked their expectations for economic growth this quarter to 4 percent or more, a big step up from last quarter's 2.4 percent pace.
"I'd say we're getting somewhat more balanced growth now than we have in a long time. But I still question whether this growth will be sustained a year from now," said Paul Kasriel, chief economist and director of research at Northern Trust in Chicago.
Not only did home builders break new ground at a breakneck speed in July, but housing starts for both May and June were also revised up. That means overall growth for last quarter could be revised higher, setting a stronger trajectory for the economy.
BUY HOMES NOW
The Commerce Department said housing starts rose 1.5 percent in July to a seasonally adjusted 1.872 million annual rate, the highest since 1986 and easily beating forecasts for a dip to a 1.793 million rate.
Starts of single-family homes came in at the highest since November 1978 at a 1.521 million annual rate. The figures came on the heels of another report showing confidence among home builders hitting its highest level in 3-1/2 years in August, even better than throughout the recent boom.
A sharp 1 percentage point jump in 30-year mortgage rates since June has prompted a wave of Americans to buy homes or try to get last minute refinancings before rates head even higher. While higher mortgage rates will slow some of the housing boom, analysts do not see a big reversal.
"There's no doubt it will slow things down in the next three months. But I don't expect to see a sharp downturn in the housing sector," said Ruskin at 4Cast.
The July report did include one cautionary sign. Permits for new homes -- an indicator of future building -- dipped 2.4 percent to a 1.780 million annual pace.
Stock and bond markets mostly looked past the data.
EVER CAUTIOUS CONSUMERS
The University of Michigan said its preliminary index of sentiment for August dipped to 90.2 from 90.9, contrary to forecasts for a rise to 91.0. Assessments of current conditions were tempered on the month, sliding to 100.5 from 102.1. But the expectations slipped only slightly to 83.6 from 83.7 after a sharp fall the prior month.
In a change the Fed will be heartened to see, respondents in the University of Michigan survey also increased their expectations for inflation in the next year to 2.3 percent from 1.7 percent.
That makes it less likely consumers will become used to lower prices in a way that could herald deflation, or a pernicious fall in prices and incomes that the Fed has vowed to avoid at all costs.
Even the historic blackout failed to keep consumers from hitting stores to spend some of their tax rebates and extra cash from refinancings, according to one weekly survey.
Sales at major U.S. chain stores climbed 3.3 percent in the week ended Aug. 16 compared with the same week a year ago, up from 3.1 percent the prior week, Instinet Research said in its weekly Redbook report. Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT - News) said on Monday its August sales are poised for the best showing in 14 months.
(With additional reporting by Jonathan Nicholson, Kevin Plumberg and Daniel Bases)
The full commerce Dept report (.pdf) is at NEW RESIDENTIAL SALES IN JUNE 2003
Among others, noteworthy is the 2.4% drop in new building permits.
WASHINGTON, Aug 26 (Reuters) - The Commerce Department on Tuesday revised U.S. building permit data issued on Aug. 19. The data are seasonally adjusted annual rates, in 1,000s: PCT CHANGE: July (Prev) June (Prev) July03/02 (Prev) Permits -1.3 -2.4 1.1 1.1 3.3 2.2 RATES July (Prev) June (Prev) July 2002 (Prev) Permits 1,800 1,780 1,823 1,823 1,742 1,742 PERMITS July (Prev) June (Prev) July 2002 (Prev) Single 1,434 1,423 1,427 1,427 1,312 1,312 Multiple 366 357 396 396 430 430 REGIONAL BREAKDOWN . Pct (Prev) Rate (Prev) Northeast 1.9 1.3 161 160 Midwest -4.0 -5.3 364 359 South -3.9 -4.5 810 805 West 5.0 2.9 465 456 Actual Permits, unadjusted in 1,000s: . July (Prev) June (Prev) July02 (Prev) Permits 166 164 172 172 159 159
Cheapy, truss wood, paper mache baseboard, wavy drywall, uneven floor overpriced, over financed sold to bankrupt people who will be leaving the keys on the kitchen counter some day soon.
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