Housing   starts continued to fall in October, decreasing by 11.7 percent over the   month. This brings the annualized sales pace to 519,000 units, the lowest   level since April, 2009. Housing starts have been very volatile over the past   few months; however, this has mostly been due to large swings in multi-family   unit starts. In October, this category fell 43.5 percent. Single family   starts fell by a much lesser 1.1 percent. Single family starts have   essentially been flat for the past four months at an annualized pace of   around 440,000. Still, this is a very slow pace and shows that building activity   remains depressed.
 
  “The excess inventory of existing homes continues to be a drag on housing   starts. Until this inventory is absorbed, housing starts will stay at near   historic low levels.” said Jim Chessen, ABA’s Chief Economist. Both single   family and total housing starts have been in a range for this past year that   is lower than any period since prior to WWII.
 
  From a year prior, total starts were down 4.5 percent. Single family starts   were down by a lesser 1.1 percent when compared to a year ago.
 
  New building permits, which tend to lead future starts, rose by a modest 0.5   percent over the month. Single family permits rose 1.0 percent, which was the   first increase since March. Meanwhile, multi-family unit permits continued to   decline, falling 0.7 percent. 
 
With the excess inventory home builders will continue to hold off projects. Many developers and builders have tons of shovel ready projects and are just waiting for the market to clear. But with housing crisis well into its third year the demand is just not in the market. It is clear that housing market will no longer be as dominate as it once was in the economy because there is no longer the demand the mid 2000's.
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