U.S. Housing Starts Rose to Fastest Pace Since 2006 in December

U.S. home construction starts rose in December to the best pace since late 2006 as builders responded to the robust demand for single-family housing.

Residential starts climbed by 5.8% to a 1.67 million annualized rate, according to government data released Thursday. That topped all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists that had a median forecast of 1.56 million and compared with an upwardly revised 1.58 million rate in November.

The figures are the latest sign of the housing market’s strong rebound. The Federal Reserve’s ultra-easy monetary policy has helped push mortgage rates to record lows that are attracting more potential home buyers and underpinning historically strong demand.

“Housing remains a bright spot in an otherwise weak economy,” Rubeela Farooqi, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said in a note. “Lean inventories will likely continue to provide support to building activity over coming months, mostly in the single-family sector.”

A gauge of homebuilder stocks rose for an eighth straight day.

The full year saw a total of 1.38 million starts, with single-family construction climbing to 991,200, both the highest since the mid-2000s, according to the report, which is published jointly by the Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.

Meanwhile applications to build, a proxy for future construction, increased 4.5% in December to a 1.71 million annualized rate that was also the best since 2006.