Housing starts changed very little in late 2022, but permits fell

North American housing start continued to underperform towards end of last year

Housing starts in November last year remained on a slight downward trajectory, falling to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.427 million units. Starts were down 0.4% month over month, but trailed the year-ago pace by 16.4%, according to the US Census Bureau.

Single-family starts remained the particular laggard, dipping 4.1% from their October 2022 level to 828,000 units. That’s down 32.1% from the November 2021 reading. Multifamily starts remained resilient, climbing 4.9% on a monthly basis. The increase pushed multifamily starts to 599,000 units, 23.3% above the year-ago level.

On a regional basis, monthly drops were most pronounced in the Northeast, where they fell 18.6% month over month. Starts in the Midwest also dipped, while the South and West registered 0.1% and 8.3% increases, respectively.

Builder sentiment, as tracked by the National Association of Home Builders, has been persistently weak. The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index fell two points this month to a reading of 31. That’s the 12th straight monthly decline in the index, and the lowest reading since 2012 with the exception of early pandemic levels.

“It’s no surprise that single-family starts are running at their lowest level since May 2020, given that builder sentiment has dropped for 12 consecutive months as builders remain fixated on rising building material costs and supply chain bottlenecks, with electrical transformers in particular being in short supply,” said Jerry Konter, chairman of the NAHB.

While market reaction to the November report was muted, wood products’ traders did take note of the plunge in permits. Housing permits fell 11.2% month over month to 1.342 million units (SAAR). Total permits have fallen 22.4% from the year-ago pace.

A surge in housing units completed helped close the historic gap that had developed between starts and completions. Completions climbed 10.8% to 1.490 million units (SAAR). November marked the first time completions have surpassed starts since 2020.

What to read next
Learn how timber imports affect the US economy regarding Canadian softwood lumber and future trade policies.
Explore the current trends in the wood market as prices for framing lumber continue to decline amidst economic uncertainty.
Fastmarkets is inviting feedback from the industry on pricing methodologies for Random Lengths and Random Lengths International as part of its annual methodology review process.
Discover key insights from The Lumber Word Podcast on lumber market dynamics and the impact of current tariffs.
Extreme volatility in the stock market, and accompanying widespread concern about the broader economy distracted framing lumber traders all week. Constant shifts in news emanating from the White House about tariffs kept traders on edge. Many traders, particularly in Canada, spent much of the week at the Montreal Wood Convention. Buyers replenished cautiously and conservatively […]
This consultation, which is open until May 11, 2025, seeks to ensurethat our methodologies continue to reflect the physical marketunder indexation, in compliance with the International Organizationof Securities Commissions (IOSCO) principles for Price ReportingAgencies (PRAs). This includes all elements of our pricing process, ourprice specifications, and publication frequency.You can find the current methodology for North […]