Construction of new homes swung up unexpectedly in April, as the number of new multifamily housing units grew.
Construction of new homes swung up unexpectedly in April, as the number of new multifamily housing units grew.
Overall, housing starts increased 8.2% for the month, to a seasonally adjusted annual total of 1.032 million, according to data from the Department of Commerce.
The increase was the largest monthly jump since housing starts rose 14% in January 2006.
Economists surveyed by MarketWatch had predicted that housing starts in April would fall to 939,000.
Housing starts in March fell 13.8% to 954,000, marking a larger decline than the 11.9% decrease to 947,000 units that was originally anticipated by the Commerce Department.
Despite the increase, housing starts were 30.6% below the level of construction in April 2007.
Housing starts for homes with five units or more increased 40.5% from March, to 326,000.
Single-family housing starts fell 1.7% to 692,000 in April, marking the lowest level since 1991.
Building permits increased 4.9% in April to a seasonally adjusted rate of 978,000, with single-family home permits rising 4% and multifamily permits growing 6.8%.
Since April 2007, construction of new multifamily units has increased 28.9%, while construction of single-family homes is down 42.2%.