Housing Starts Have Risen in 8 Out of 9 Months This Year

by Tyler Osby on October 21, 2009

What is a Housing Start?

A “Housing Start” is a home for which the foundation has been excavated and, considered alongside other key market metrics, September data suggests that the housing market has stabilization is complete.

Momentum in housing is overwhelmingly positive:

Despite the positive news, the press is calling September’s Housing Starts data a “bummer”. Citing a drop in monthly building permits, the media purports that housing will slow in the months ahead. 

The conclusion may be right, but the rationale is may be wrong. 

Housing Market is on the Path to Recovery

The probable cause for fewer permits isn’t that the housing market is overdone.  It’s that home builders are choosing to exercise caution given the pending expiration of the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit and a still-growing number of foreclosed homes. 

It’s unclear what housing demand will be beginning in December and the last present a builder wants for the holidays is an excess of inventory.

It makes sense that building permits are down, in other words.

Looking back at February of this year, there’s a host of signs that housing is on the path to recovery.  Now, that path won’t be a straight line and there’s bound to be setbacks, but September’s Housing Starts is not one of them.

Housing Starts are up 40 percent on the year.

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