Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Residential Construction Report: October 2007

Today’s New Residential Construction Report continues to firmly indicate a new leg down in the decline to the nation’s housing markets and for new residential construction showing substantial declines on a year-over-year and month-to-month basis to single family permits both nationally and across every region.

Single family housing permits, the most leading of indicators, again suggests extensive weakness in future construction activity dropping a staggering 31.0% nationally as compared to October 2006.

Moreover, every region showed significant double digit declines to permits with the West declining 30.9%, the South declining 35.6%, the Midwest declining 22.5% and the Northeast declining 17.9%.

Keep in mind that these declines are coming on the back of last year’s record declines.

To illustrate the extent to which permits and starts have declined, I have created the following charts (click for larger versions) that show the percentage changes of the current values compared to the peak years of 2004 and 2005.

Notice that on each chart the line is essentially combining the year-over-year changes seen in 2005, 2006 and 2007 showing virtually every measure trending down precipitously.

Although year-over-year declines to permits, for example, have not accelerated measurably from their peak YOY declines, the fact that they continue to decline roughly 20%-30% should provide a solid indication that they are by no means stabilizing.





Remember that permits, starts, and completions are not simply independent measures but are, in fact, three logically related and dependent measures.

In the process of a building project, first you get the “permit”, next you “start” building, and finally you “complete” the project.

For this reason, one must adjust expectations prior to reading a newly released Census Department report to account for the true nature of the data published simultaneously each month.

As in past months, I have “smoothed” out the unadjusted data and aligned the three data series (i.e. moved starts ahead a month and completions ahead six months) to make more obvious their trend.


Here are the statistics outlined in today’s report:

Housing Permits

Nationally

  • Single family housing permits down 30.1% as compared to October 2006
Regionally

  • For the Northeast, single family housing down 17.8% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the West, single family housing permits down 30.9% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the Midwest, single family housing permits down 22.5% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the South, single family housing permits down 35.6% compared to October 2006.
Housing Starts

Nationally

  • Single family housing starts down 25.1% as compared to October 2006.
Regionally

  • For the Northeast, single family housing starts down 4.7% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the West, single family housing starts down 30.2% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the Midwest, single family housing starts down 9.8% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the South, single family housing starts down 31.4% as compared to October 2006.
Housing Completions

Nationally

  • Single family housing completions down 25.8% as compared to October 2006.
Regionally

  • For the Northeast, single family housing completions up 5.8% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the West, single family housing completions down 37.4% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the Midwest, single family housing completions down 33.5% as compared to October 2006.
  • For the South, single family housing completions down 22.0% as compared to October 2006.
Keep in mind that this particular report does NOT factor in the cancellations that have been widely reported to be occurring in new construction.