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US housing construction drops sharply in January

Bone-chilling temperatures hurt housing construction in the United States in January. But some wonder if a broader slowdown is at hand.
Bone-chilling temperatures hurt housing construction in the United States in January. But some wonder if a broader slowdown is at hand. Tony Dejak/AP

WASHINGTON – U.S. home construction fell in January for a second month but the weakness in both months reflected severe winter weather in many parts of the country.

The expectation is that housing will deliver another year of solid gains, helped by an improving economy.

The Commerce Department says builders started work at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 880,000, down 16 per cent from December. In December, construction had fallen 4.8 per cent. The declines in both months were blamed largely on the weather.

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Still, some are wondering if a broader slowdown is at hand.

“Can we put full blame on bad weather?” BMO economists said in a note. “Sales expectations over the next six months also took a step back, suggesting that home builders are a bit more concerned beyond the weather.”

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But they added: “On the plus side, at least the worries are on the supply side, not the demand side.”

Applications for building permits fell in January for a third month, dropping 5.4 per cent to a rate of 937,000.

For all of 2013, housing construction rose 17.7 per cent to 976,000 units, the best showing since 2007. Analysts expect further gains this year as stronger job growth boosts demand.

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