- Ryan Wang, HSBC Securities USA Inc.
US housing starts dropped unexpectedly last month, whereas building permits rose more than expected, official figures revealed on Wednesday. According to the US Department of Commerce, the total number of housing starts issued fell 9.0% to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 1.05 million in September, hitting the lowest level since March 2015, while market analysts anticipated a slight increase to 1.18 million units during the reported period. August's housing starts were revised up to a 1.15 million rate from the originally reported pace of 1.14 million starts. US single-family starts, which account for the largest segment of the market, climbed 8.1% to a 783,000 unit pace last month, the highest reading since February. The drop was mainly driven by the volatile multi-family segment, which posted a 38.0% decline to 264,000 unit pace in September. In the meantime, building permits advanced 6.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 1.23 million in the same month, following August's upwardly revised reading of 1.15 million permits and surpassing the 1.17 million unit pace market forecast. Building activity is set to rebound in the coming months as building permit values remained strong, with single-family and multi-family permits rising 0.4% and 16.8% in September.
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