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New U.S. Home Construction in April Slumps by Most on Record

U.S. home construction starts plunged in April by the most in records back to 1959.

New U.S. Home Construction in April Slumps by Most on Record
A workers uses a hammer to remove a cement form at a low-income housing construction site in Schenectady, New York. (Photographer: Angus Mordant/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. home construction starts plunged in April by the most in records back to 1959, as the nationwide lockdown to control the spread of the coronavirus hammered the housing market and broader economy.

Residential starts plummeted 30.2% to an 891,000 annualized rate from a month earlier, the lowest level since February 2015, according to a government report released Tuesday. The median forecast in a Bloomberg survey called for a 900,000 pace. Applications to build, a proxy for future construction, dropped 20.8%, the most since July 2008, to a five-year low 1.07 million rate.

New U.S. Home Construction in April Slumps by Most on Record

The slowdown in residential construction followed an 18.6% March slide, representing a rapid turn of events for the nation’s homebuilders, which were seeing solid demand entering 2020 on the heels of a steady job market and cheap borrowing costs. Sales and starts may begin to stabilize in coming months as most U.S. states relax business restrictions and mortgage rates hold near all-time lows.

The Commerce Department’s data showed single-family starts dropped 25.4% to a five-year low 650,000 annualized rate. Multifamily starts, a category that tends to be volatile and includes apartment buildings and condominiums, plunged 40.5% to a 241,000 pace.

An S&P index of homebuilder stocks declined more than 1% in earlier trade Tuesday.

April may mark the bottom for home construction. A report Monday showed a gauge of builder sentiment advanced in May, a month after the worst decline on records back to 1985. The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index climbed by 7 points to 37 as firms cited better sales, demand expectations and prospective buyer foot traffic.

Stay-at-home orders across the country from mid-March through mid-April impacted professional and do-it-yourself retail business at Home Depot Inc., according to quarterly results announced Tuesday by the home-improvement retailer. Shares fell 2.5% in early trade after the company’s first earnings miss in six years.

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