The Commerce
Department reported on Wednesday the building permits issued for privately
owned housing units plunged by 6.1 percent m-o-m in June to a seasonally
adjusted annual pace of 1.220 million (the lowest level since May 2017), while
housing starts fell by 0.9 percent m-o-m to an annual rate 1.253 million.
Economists had
forecast housing starts increasing by 1.9 percent m-o-m last month and building
permits edging up 0.1 percent m-o-m.
Data for May
was revised slightly down to show homebuilding declining to a pace of 1.265
million units, instead of falling to a rate of 1.269 million units as
previously reported.
According to
the report, permits for single-family homes, the largest segment of the market,
rose 0.4 percent m-o-m at 813,000 in June, while approvals for the multi-family
homes segment declined 16.8 percent m-o-m to a 407,000 unit-rate.
In the
meantime, groundbreaking on single-family homes rose 3.5 percent m-o-m to a
rate of 847,000 units in June, while housing starts for the multi-family tumbled
climbed 9.2 percent m-o-m to a 406,000-unit pace.