NBN Online for the week of April 25, 2005

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Builders Testify on Housing Finance System Reform
Will You Be the Next Winner of a Digital Camera?
Builders Make Annual Trek to Capitol Hill
Layouts for Living
Floor Plans: Concrete Custom Home Conquers Unworkable Lot
Coast to Coast
Studies: Gentrification a Boost for Everyone
Politics & Government
Storm Water Rules Contribute to High Housing Costs
Homeownership Tax Credit Bills Introduced
Pombo Pledges Meaningful Endangered Species Reform
Bill Halts Tenant Bankruptcy Abuse
House Acts to Permanently Repeal Estate Tax
Lawmakers Urge Bush to End Lumber Tariffs
Association Health Plan Efforts Move Forward
Economics & Finance
Home Starts Slow in March From 32-Year High
Builders Remain Upbeat in April
Eye on the Economy
VA Secretary Urges Builders to Hire Young Veterans
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Self-Centering Router Base
Business Management
Back Up Your Company Data — Before It's Too Late
Codes and Standards
Members Urged to Help Defeat Costly Code Changes
Builders Show
Builders’ Show Too Big for Atlanta in 2007, 2008
Multifamily
Sen. Corzine Wins Affordable Housing Award
Remodelers
May is National Home Remodeling Month
Construction Safety
Precautions Needed for Working in Hot Weather
Education
Concrete Technologies Tour: Turning Gray Matter Into Green
Education Calendar
Green Building
Employees Learn About Green Building on Earth Day
Environment
Builders Advocate ESA Reform at U.S. Interior Meeting
Women
Distinguish Yourself Through Advanced Technology
Building Systems
Tour to Visit Modular and Panelized Plants
Standard for Residential Concrete Walls Being Developed
Labor
Job Corps Students Participate in NAHB Family Build
Job Corps Grads Fill Labor Needs in Arizona
Building Products
Seminar Examines Cold-Formed Steel Design
Builder's Engineer
Basement Snorkeling
TV
Members Build a Basement on The History Channel
NAHB Production Group Calendar of Shows — This Week
Association news
Totem Pole a ‘Thank You’ for Roadless Rule Efforts
Tsunami Shelter Fund to Support Construction Center, 'Home Builders Care Village'
National Housing Endowment Names Roger Pastore to Board of Trustees, Founding Advocates
Get GM Discount on More Than 80 Vehicles
Calendar of Events

Related Articles

Builders Remain Upbeat in April

Eye on the Economy

VA Secretary Urges Builders to Hire Young Veterans

Home Starts Slow in March From 32-Year High

Home builders tapped the brakes in March, according to an upwardly revised report from the Commerce Department showing February’s housing starts at their highest level in 32 years and single-family production at a record peak.

Starts were down 17.6% to a still-solid seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.84 million units in March.

“It’s been a phenomenal first quarter for home building, marked by robust buyer demand and the best production pace in decades,” said NAHB President Dave Wilson. “The March slowdown is a good sign that builders are exercising caution to keep the market healthy and inventories at a reasonable level, and many companies are taking steps to limit sales to speculators. Meanwhile, builders remain very upbeat about their prospects in the months ahead.”

“The March decline in housing starts was, to some degree, weather-related,” added NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. “A sizeable decline in the South — the nation’s largest housing market — followed a surge that was related to rebuilding in the wake of last fall’s hurricanes, and late-winter storms apparently held back starts in other areas as well.”

Seiders noted that, “Looking at today’s permit numbers, which are a better indication of the market’s current condition than starts, the picture seems much brighter. Also, if you look at the backlog of units that have been permitted but not yet started, and the latest downshift in long-term mortgage rates, the upside potential for housing starts appears good for the immediate future.”

Single-family starts last month declined 14.4% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.54 million units. Multifamily starts, which tend to fluctuate more sharply from month to month, declined 31% in March, following exceptionally high activity in January and February.

Three out of four regions recorded double-digit declines in housing starts in March from big numbers in the previous months. Starts declined 29.3% in the Midwest, 18% in the South, 12.7% in the West and 3.6% in the Northeast.

Building permits fell a more-modest 4.0%, remaining above the two-million unit mark for the ninth consecutive month.

Single-family permits were down 5.4% and multifamily permits were up 1.1%. March permit levels remained unchanged in the Northeast and dipped 1.8% in the South, 4.2% in the West and 11% in the Midwest.

NAHB is forecasting 1.92 million total housing starts for 2005, which would be 1.4% below last year. “That 2005 performance could be even better if the interest rate structure moves up less than anticipated,” said Seiders.



Anticipate the Trends, Make Better Decisions and Improve Your Bottom Line ― With ‘HousingEconomics Online’

HousingEconomics Online,” the online publication from the NAHB Economics Group, is your single source for market analysis, forecasts, housing statistics and more. Updated regularly, “HousingEconomics Online” combines scientific research with practical applications in order to provide housing-oriented insights for builders, manufacturers and housing finance professionals and to assist in their business planning.

Available at two levels — Pro and Executive — subscribers can choose the one that best meets their needs. To learn more or to subscribe to “HousingEconomics Online,” visit www.housingeconomics.com.

 


 

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