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Sunday, March 14, 2010

Housing Market Index, Housing Starts, Snow and Spec Homes

by Calculated Risk on 3/14/2010 09:33:00 PM

As mentioned in the Weekly Summary and a Look Ahead post, the NAHB Housing Market Index for March, and Housing Starts for February, will both be released early this week.

Here is a graph showing the relationship between the two series:

HMI and Starts Correlation Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph compares the NAHB HMI (left scale) with single family housing starts (right scale). This includes the February release for the HMI and the January data for single family starts.

This shows that the HMI and single family starts mostly move in the same direction - although there is plenty of noise month-to-month. Since the NAHB index increased slightly in February (it is released a month ahead of starts), we might expect some increase in February single family housing starts.

HMI and Starts Correlation Of course the snow might be a factor, although few new homes are built in the northeast compared to the rest of the country. Of course D.C. is in the South region (as is Virginia), so it might be hard to tell. Here is a map of states in each region for the Census Bureau report.

There might also be an increase in speculative starts in some regions (single family) in February since many builders started a few extra homes in anticipation of the expiration of the first time home buyer tax credit. February was probably the last chance to start a spec home to take advantage of the expected buying rush in April - since the builders have to close by the end of June. It usually takes about 6 months to build a home, but 5 months is doable for smaller homes and with so many sub contractors hungry for work.

We will need to look at the details by region this time, but the general trend is sideways ...