Fall House Hunt

US home builder confidence remains steady as lumber prices fall

This signals that the housing market, at least for new homes, may be stabilizing after signs of a slowdown in recent months.

Home-Under-Construction
. Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images/File 2017

WASHINGTON — Confidence among American home builders stabilized in September as demand held up and lumber prices fell, a National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo report showed Tuesday.

While the unchanged main gauge matched the lowest since September 2017, it bucked analyst estimates for a decline and two of the components advanced. That signals that the housing market, at least for newly constructed homes, may be stabilizing after signs of a slowdown in recent months.

While rising prices and mortgage rates have squeezed buyers, a strong labor market and tax cuts have supported demand. Data on housing starts and existing-home sales due in the next two days are both projected to show improvement in August.

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Builders continue to report strong demand as millennials and other newcomers enter the market, the report said. Affordability, however, remains a concern as builders work to manage construction costs and keep prices competitive. Lumber prices have tumbled since reaching a record in May.

“A growing economy and rising incomes combined with increasing household formations should boost demand for new single-family homes,’’ Robert Dietz, NAHB chief economist, said in a statement. “However, housing affordability is becoming a challenge, as builders face overly burdensome regulations and rising material costs exacerbated by an escalating trade skirmish.’’

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