Homebuilders are stepping up construction of single-family homes following a steady decline in mortgage rates and broad expectations among economists that home loan borrowing costs will ease further next year.
Quick Read
- Increase in Single-Family Home Construction: Homebuilders are increasing construction of single-family homes, encouraged by declining mortgage rates and anticipation of further decreases in borrowing costs next year.
- November Construction Data: According to the Commerce Department, construction of single-family homes in November reached a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.14 million units, an 18% increase from October and 42.2% from the previous year.
- Trend of Rising Construction: This rise marks three consecutive months of growth in single-family housing starts, surpassing home completions for the first time since last spring.
- Annual Comparison: Despite the recent surge, single-family home construction is down 7.2% for the first 11 months of the year compared to 2022, heading towards a second consecutive annual decline.
- Impact of Mortgage Rate Trends: Falling mortgage rates are expected to attract more homebuyers, potentially leading to further construction increases in 2024.
- Low Inventory of Existing Homes: The shortage of available previously occupied homes for sale, partly due to many homeowners having low mortgage rates, is another factor encouraging new construction.
- Homeowners’ Mortgage Rates: A significant portion of U.S. homeowners with mortgages have rates at 5% or less, while current average rates hover just under 7%.
- Forecasts for 2024: Housing economists predict moderate decreases in mortgage rates, with average rates for 30-year loans expected to remain above 6%.
- Builder Incentives and Market Outlook: Builders are motivated by the low inventory of resale homes and recent mortgage rate declines. Experts predict varying degrees of growth in single-family starts for next year.
- Industry Projections: Different organizations, including the National Association of Home Builders and the National Association of Realtors, have varying projections for the increase in single-family home construction in 2024.
The Associated Press has the story:
Homebuilders step up construction of single-family homes after mortgage rate eases below 7%
Newslooks- LOS ANGELES (AP)
Homebuilders are stepping up construction of single-family homes following a steady decline in mortgage rates and broad expectations among economists that home loan borrowing costs will ease further next year.
Builders broke ground on single-family homes in November at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of about 1.14 million units, the Commerce Department reported this week. That’s an 18% jump from October and a 42.2% increase from November last year. It also marks the fastest pace for single-family housing starts since April 2022.
Single-family housing starts have now risen three months in a row and are outpacing home completions for the first time since the spring of last year.
Even with November’s ramp-up, construction of single-family homes remains on pace for its second straight annual decline, with starts down 7.2% through the first 11 months of this year versus the same period in 2022.
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Still, if mortgage rates continue to fall, that should spur more homebuyers to come off the sidelines and give builders more reason to accelerate construction next year.
Another incentive: The inventory of previously occupied homes for sale is likely to remain constrained because many homeowners have locked in a mortgage rate well below where rates are today.
Consider, some 67% of U.S. homeowners with a a mortgage have a 30-year fixed-rate home loan at 5% or less. Even with its recent decline, the average rate on a 30-year mortgage remains just under 7%, according to mortgage buyer Freddie Mac.
Several housing economists are projecting that mortgage rates will ease only moderately next year, with forecasts calling for the average rate on a 30-year home loan to remain above 6%. That means many homeowners are likely to remain discouraged from selling next year —- another incentive for builders to expand construction in 2024 off this year’s low level.
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“New supply of housing is needed to meet demand, especially in an environment where most existing homeowners are rate-locked in and unwilling to part with their low mortgage rate,” said Odeta Kushi, deputy chief economist at First American. “Builders are benefitting from a lack of resale inventory. The recent decline in mortgage rates should contribute to the single-family momentum.”
The National Association of Home Builders is projecting a roughly 4% increase in single-family starts next year as “mortgage rates settle lower, economic growth slows and inflation moves lower,” according to Robert Dietz, the NAHB’s chief economist.
Realtor.com, meanwhile, projects a more modest 0.4% increase.
Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of Realtors, forecasts that builders will break ground on 1.04 million single-family homes next year. That would be amount to a 13% increase from a projected 920,000 starts this year.