U.S. new-home home construction slipped in April amid ongoing supply-side challenges and the steepest climb in mortgage rates in decades.
Residential starts decreased 0.2% last month to a 1.72 million annualized rate after a downwardly revised 1.73 million pace in the prior month, according to government data released Wednesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a 1.76 million pace.
Applications to build, a proxy for future construction, fell 3.2% to an annualized 1.82 million units.
Builders are contending with high material prices amid decades-high inflation, along with continued difficulty securing lots and labor. That, combined with concerns that the steep surge in borrowing costs will squeeze would-be buyers out of the market, pushed a measure of homebuilder sentiment this month to the lowest level since June 2020.
The average for a 30-year loan
Single-family starts fell 7.3% in April to an annualized pace of 1.1 million units as multifamily starts — which tend to be volatile and include apartment buildings and condominiums — rose 15.3%.
The report showed the number of single-family homes authorized for construction but not yet started -- a measure of backlogs -- rose slightly to the highest level in over 15 years. Overall backlogs climbed to the highest since 1974.
The number of single-family properties under construction continued to rise as builders make some headway, reaching 815,000, the most since 2006. The total number of units that remain under construction advanced to a record.