Homebuilding slows but permits hit their highest level in three years

Permits for single-family homes in February were at a rate of 472,000 — just about 66 percent of all permits — a 4.9 percent increase above January’s revised figure of 450,000. Permits for multi-family units were at a rate of 219,000 in February.

Builders can take upward of a year to get through the permitting and the construction process of a single-family house.

While builders’ confidence was flat this month, the outlook is brightening for the future, a positive sign as the housing sector makes a gradual improvement. Builders have said they expect the recovery to creep along this year but pick up pace in 2013. 

Construction of single-family houses, which represent about 70 percent of housing starts, were down 9.9 percent in February, to 457,000 from the 507,000 in January, following four straight months of increases. Apartment construction continued to help offset that drop. 

Construction of new homes constitutes just 20 percent of the housing sector but has a big economic effect — three jobs and 90,000 a year in taxes per unit, according to the National Association of Home Builders.

The housing market still has an uphill battle ahead to reach a full recovery. 
Builders are still battling a high number of lower-priced foreclosures for sale on the market, while potential homeowners are facing tighter credit availability and higher down-payment requirements. 
Still, mortgage rates are at historical lows — about 4 percent for a 30-year-fixed loan — and homebuyers are starting to take advantage of slowly changing market conditions. 
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