Housing’s Weak Start For Q2 Is Probably Just Noise

 | May 25, 2017 09:38AM ET

April was a rough month for housing. For the first time in a year, housing starts and sales of new and existing homes declined for the monthly comparison. The weakness weighed on the year-over-year change, which slumped to an 18-month low. Given housing’s critical role for growth, the slowdown would be worrisome if other corners of the economy weren’t showing signs of strength. Nonetheless, a soft housing market isn’t easily dismissed for business-cycle analysis.

The optimistic spin is that the latest downturn is only a temporary setback, in part due to an unusually wet April that kept would-be buyers away. Inventory issues are reportedly a factor depressing sales too.

“Last month’s dip in closings [of existing home sales] was somewhat expected given that there was such a strong sales increase in March at 4.2 percent, and new and existing inventory is not keeping up with the fast pace homes are coming off the market,” says Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors. “Demand is easily outstripping supply in most of the country and it’s stymieing many prospective buyers from finding a home to purchase.”

Sales of newly built homes also fell in April, probably due to the payback effect — transactions in March were unusually strong. Whatever the reason, sales tumbled more than 11% in April vs. the previous month, the biggest monthly setback in two years.

Meanwhile, new residential construction fell last month… again. Housing starts slumped for a second month in a row, dropping 2.6% vs. the total for March. So far this year, starts have fallen in three out of four months.

Monthly comparisons can be noisy and so it’s useful to review the annual pace for a clearer measure of the trend. But the numbers also show a clear stumble on this front, based on the average year-over-year percentage change for starts and sales of existing and new homes. The average change for the three indicators decelerated sharply in April to a weak 1.0% rise, the softest increase in 18 months.