Thursday, February 16, 2006

Housing starts up to highest level in 33 years

I guess the economy needs to thank global warming...

Feb. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Builders in the U.S. took advantage of the warmest January on record to break ground on the most new houses in more than three decades.

Construction began on homes at an annual rate of 2.276 million, up 15 percent from December's revised 1.988 million and the most since March 1973, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The increase follows the best year ever for sales.

Economists argued over whether the housing market owes its resilience entirely to a warm winter or an economy that's rebounding from a fourth-quarter slowdown. The outcome may determine how much the Federal Reserve raises interest rates after 14 consecutive increases since June 2004.

[...] A separate report today showed manufacturing in the Philadelphia area accelerated this month, another sign the economy is gathering momentum. The Fed Bank of Philadelphia's general economic index rose to 15.4, the highest since August, from 3.3 in January.


As the article notes, don't bet the farm on this data alone. It's just an indicator of the healthiest horrible economy ever.