(Bloomberg) -- U.S. housing starts decreased in September, driven by a pullback in multifamily construction, as lingering supply-chain constraints, shortages of skilled labor and elevated materials costs continue to challenge builders.
Residential starts fell 1.6% last month to a 1.56 million annualized rate, according to government data released Tuesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey called for a 1.62 million pace.
Applications to build, a proxy for future construction, fell 7.7% to an annualized 1.59 million units in September. That’s the largest monthly decline since February.
Cheap borrowing costs and a pandemic-fueled migration to the suburbs supported housing demand and construction through late 2020 and earlier this year. But high materials costs, unpredictable supply-chain delays and labor shortages have strained builders’ ability to keep up with still-solid demand in more recent months.
Single-family starts were unchanged in September at an annualized 1.08 million units as multifamily starts -- which tend to be volatile and include apartment buildings and condominiums -- decreased 5% to 475,000.
Meanwhile, the report indicates builders are making little headway on project backlogs. The number of single-family homes authorized for construction but not yet started -- a measure of backlogs -- edged lower to 144,000 in September but remains near a 15-year high.
While high construction costs helped fuel a surge in prices that has cooled buyer interest somewhat, builders remain generally optimistic. A gauge of homebuilder sentiment rose to a three-month high in October -- holding well-above pre-pandemic levels -- a separate report showed Monday.
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