Construction starts on new U.S. homes plunged to a 17-1/2-year low during August as builders scaled back sharply to try to cope with the worst slump in U.S. housing since the Great Depression.
The Commerce Department reported on Wednesday that starts on new homes dropped 6.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 895,000, their lowest since January 1991 and well below the 950,000 rate that Wall Street economists surveyed by Reuters had anticipated.
In a further sign of the severe strain the economy faces, the department also said the deficit on the broadest measure of U.S. trade with the rest of the world widened to $183.1 billion in the second quarter from $175.6 billion in the first three months his year.
The U.S. shortfall on trade in goods with other countries grew and imports of oil were up, the department said.
The data on new-home starts was bleak, reflecting a battered housing sector that Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has described as posing the single greatest threat to the overall economy.
But analysts said fewer starts were a step toward ensuring a housing correction occurs.
"Builders are continuing drastically to cut the flow of new inventory to the market, the essential precondition for stability," said Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics.
The August rate of starts on single-family homes — a closely watched barometer that is more closely tied to average consumers' behavior — fell 1.9 percent to 630,000, which also was the softest rate since the start of 1991.
Starts in August were a whopping 33 percent below the level a year earlier.
With home foreclosures soaring and prices falling, builders were clearly bracing for a protracted downturn. New applications for building permits declined 8.9 percent in August to an annual rate of 854,000.
It was the weakest rate for permits since February 1991 and was far below forecasts for a 930,000-unit rate. The rate of permit applications last month was 36 percent weaker than in August 2007.
Since the government seized ailing mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac earlier this month, hopes have risen that an expedited way will be found to refinance mortgages that are late or otherwise stressed.
A separate report on Wednesday showed home loan applications jumped last week as mortgage rates have fallen since the takeover of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The Treasury department said at the time that it was willing to pump up to $200 billion into the companies to keep them functioning
The Mortgage Bankers Association's index of mortgage applications, which includes both purchase and refinance loans, jumped 33.4 percent to 661.7 last week, the highest level since May 9. (Reuters)
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