Don’t Be Misled by the Drop in Housing Starts

Some markets are showing large increases in homebuilding.

1 MIN READ

The government’s June report on housing starts showed an 11.1% decline, but that was on the heels of an incredibly strong report the previous month.

We at Metrostudy have just completed another complete count of builder activity and new-home supply in markets all around the nation, and it provides strong quantitative evidence that the demand for new homes is still recovering, albeit slowly. Furthermore, builders in most markets are confident that this slow-motion rebound will continue. That is why builder confidence has improved, and lot development is up 21.5% year-over-year (according to Metrostudy’s latest research).

The supply of new homes remains tight. Finished new-home inventory is still at 2.5 months of supply, which is in the historically normal range, but somewhat low for a market that is starting to revive rapidly. This explains the high rate of price increases on new homes.

There is much more detail available in Metrostudy’s research than is evident in the government data; some markets are actually showing very strong increases in homebuilding. Here are some of the markets that we have found are increasing home production the most. The former “bubble” markets figure prominently in this list, reflecting the fact that they had fallen so far during the downturn.

Recently-reported Metrostudy quarterly data, construction of single-family detached homes, versus four quarters ago.

  • Northern California +46.3%
  • Reno +44.9%
  • Las Vegas +36.5%
  • Naples/Ft. Myers +27.4%
  • Tampa +15.4%
  • Atlanta +15.0%
  • Denver/Co. Springs +14.9%

About the Author

Brad Hunter

Brad Hunter is Metrostudy’s chief economist and director of strategic consulting. Hunter directs Metrostudy’s consulting work nationwide and spearheads Metrostudy’s current work with the national development community as well as investment firms. Metrostudy is the nation’s premier advisor on local and regional housing market conditions. The firm’s unmatched database provides the quantitative foundation for its consulting and advisory work, and backs up Hunter’s forecasts of the housing market, which have been consistently more accurate than those of most other economists. Hunter also supervises the bulk of the company’s multi-market studies, and has orchestrated hundreds of site-specific or area-specific housing market studies over the past twenty-five years of his career. He oversees the company’s work for investment funds who are investing a combined $1 billion in residential property nationwide. With 25 years’ experience in real estate analysis and local market economics, Hunter is a full member of the Urban Land Institute, has authored numerous articles and chapters in ULI-published books, including Market Profiles, chairs various committees, and is an active member of the national Community Development Council. He is regularly cited in local and national journals including recent interviews by the Wall Street Journal, Business Week, and on CNBC and Bloomberg News. His analysis is also featured in the book Foreclosure Nation. Hunter graduated in 1985 from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in economics and has been a guest lecturer at Harvard University. Hunter is a speaker at conferences on real estate opportunities and investing, as well as at real estate think tanks, and is frequently called upon by key regulatory agencies of the U.S. government for his insights on the housing sector.

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