Housing Starts in US Decline to Lowest Level Since September

New US home construction fell in June to the lowest since September after plunging the prior month, driven by a slide in single-family homebuilding that underscores waning demand.

Residential starts declined 2% last month to a 1.56 million annualized rate, after an upwardly revised 1.59 million pace in May, according to government data released Tuesday. The median forecast called for a 1.58 million pace.

Applications to build, a proxy for future construction, eased to an annualized 1.69 million units, also the fewest since September.

Starts and permits of single-family homes slid to two-year lows, adding to an increasingly downbeat picture for the housing market. A sharp rise in mortgage rates, spurred by aggressive actions by the Federal Reserve to curb inflation, has crushed affordability and curbed demand. As a result, inventory has increased, housing deals are falling through and some sellers are now cutting prices.