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Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect
Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect
Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for ConstructConnect. He is a frequent contributor to the Daily Commercial News and the Journal of Commerce. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the Canadian, United States and world construction outlooks. A trusted and often-quoted source for … More »

Booms in U.S. & Canadian Housing: One Tentative, the Other Boisterous

 
May 25th, 2021 by Alex Carrick, Chief Economist at ConstructConnect

Article source: ConstructConnect

When presenting housing starts for the U.S. and Canada, the Census Bureau and CMHC first seasonally adjust monthly ‘actual’ units and then annualize them, to arrive at what are termed SAAR (seasonally adjusted and annualized) figures. ‘Annualizing’ takes the monthly number and projects it out over 12 months.
The January-April average of the four monthly SAAR figures for the U.S. so far this year is 1.594 million units, +18.2% when compared with January-April 2020’s average. Since the Fall of last year, a mini new housing construction boom has been underway in America.
Canada’s January-April average of monthly SAAR starts has been 295,700 units, +50.5% versus the comparable average managed in the first four months of last year. In Canada, the boom in residential groundbreakings isn’t speaking tentatively, rather it’s shouting.

Graph 1


Graph 2

The Singles vs Multis Split
A major difference between U.S. and Canadian housing starts is to be found in the relative shares of single-family starts versus multi-family starts. As Graph 3 shows, singles as a share of U.S. total housing starts are usually around 70%. They currently claim a 71.4% slice. At the tail end of the 2008-09 recession, they rose as high as 90%.
In Canada, the relationship is reversed. Multis account for the bigger proportion. Year to date in 2021, among Canada’s 35 census metropolitan areas (CMAs), multis comprise 77.9% of the total, with singles at only 22.1%.
In Canada’s three largest population centers, multis are an even bigger part of the total. In Toronto, the pie wedge is 84.6%; in Vancouver, 89.1%; and in Montreal, 91.3%.
Graph 3

What do Permits Say?
From Graph 4, U.S. housing starts have finally climbed back to 1.6 million units SAAR on a consistent basis. But that’s not keeping up with the pace of permits, which is close to 1.8 million units, as set out in Graph 5. The high number of permits indicates that there will be ongoing strength in U.S. new home starts for at least a while.
This argument receives further support from Graph 6, which plots the rolling-forward latest 12-month sums of the differences between permits and starts, both as ‘actuals’. Over the past three months, the permits-to-starts differentials have soared to their highest positions in six years.
Graph 4

Graph 5

Graph 6

It’s the South and West over the Northeast and Midwest
From Graph 7, the region with the greatest percentage increase in starts to date this year has been the Northeast, +37.1%, followed by the Midwest, +24.9%, and the West, +21.5%. The South has also seen a gain, but of a less stellar amount, +12.2%.
Graphs 9 and 10, however, are interesting because they show the relative performances of the regions over a longer time frame. To make the comparisons easier, they adopt an index approach.
In Graph 9, the year 2000 is the base. The 2000 level is set equal to 100.0. Annual levels for each series after 2000 are divided by the level in 2000 and multiplied by 100.
All the regions had steep drops through 2009, but they’ve recovered nicely since. Only the South Region, though, in 2020 managed a level of housing starts greater than in 2000.
From Graph 10, which also employs index values, but adopts a 2009 base, it’s the West showing the greatest improvement over the last ten years, followed by the South, with the Midwest and Northeast skirmishing over third and fourth spots.
Graph 7

Graph 8

Graph 9


Graph 10


Canadian Starts Way Above Average
As set out in Graph 11, near the end of 2019 and in the early stages of 2020, U.S. new home starts were signaling that, on a population-adjusted basis, they were about to catch up with and overtake Canadian starts.
But a funny thing happened. Suddenly, Canadian housing starts launched into orbit. On a SAAR’s basis, their national levels this year to date have been: 308,000 units in January; 272,000 in February; 335,000 in March; and 269,000 in April.
To understand how startling those numbers are, consider that the Canadian monthly average for twenty years from 2000 to 2019, with population growth exploding mainly due to immigration (which has been much quieter of late, due to coronavirus-driven border closures), was 200,000 units.
March 2021’s level of 335,000 was two-thirds higher than average and one-fifth above the previous record peak.
Graph 11


Graph 12


Graph 13


Montreal Hottest Among Hot Spots
Among Canada’s most populous cities, Toronto usually leads the way in starts, but in some of the key metrics, TO’s first-place ranking is currently being usurped by Montreal.
With respect to ytd levels of housing starts, from Graph 14, Toronto is first in singles, but second to Montreal in multiples. Toronto still claims top spot for ‘total’, but Montreal isn’t far behind.
When it comes to ytd percentage-change in starts (Graph 15), however, Montreal is the frontrunner in all three categories, ‘singles’ (+201%); ‘multis’ (+126%); and ‘total’ (+131%). In fact, Montreal has achieved a more than doubling in all three instances.
But there’s an easy-to-understand explanation. In the Spring of last year, construction sites in Quebec were shut down for about a month due to uncertainty related to COVID-19’s spread. April 2020’s official count of housing starts in the province was zero. Therefore, the Jan-Apr 2021 year-to-date comparison is really versus the truncated time frame, Jan-Mar 2020.
Vancouver’s ytd total starts are +58% and Ottawa-Gatineau’s, +28%. In the province of Alberta, Calgary (+47%) is beating Edmonton (+1%).
Graph 14

Graph 15

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