Home Starts, Leading Index Probably Rose: U.S. Economy Preview
By Bob Willis

May 17 (Bloomberg) -- Builders probably broke ground on more houses in April 
and a measure of the U.S. economic outlook rose for the first time in almost a 
year, adding to signs the recession was abating, economists said before reports 
this week.

Housing starts increased 2 percent to an annual rate of 520,000 last month, 
according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News 
before a Commerce Department report on May 19. The index of leading economic 
indicators probably climbed 0.8 percent, figures from the Conference Board may 
show.

An easing in the housing slump, now in its fourth year, is an essential element 
of most forecasts for an economic recovery later this year. Rising stock prices 
and improving consumer confidence are among the components of the leading index 
that are stoking speculation the economy will begin to grow again in the next 
six months.

"Starts reached their trough earlier this year and are going to be on a very 
slow path to recovery through the rest of the year," said Zach Pandl, an 
economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York. "It does look 
like the recession is coming to an end."

The leading indicators index, a measure of the economy's likely path over the 
next three to six months, is due from the New York-based private research group 
on May 21.

Commerce's housing report may also show building permits, a sign of future 
construction and another component of the leading index, rose 2.7 percent to a 
530,000 rate in April from the prior month's record low.

More Stable

Housing data in recent weeks have shown signs of stabilization. Existing home 
sales, while reaching a decade-low in January, have held within a narrow range 
centered on a 4.6 million annual pace over the last five months. Sales of new 
houses, while still depressed, have bounced from a record low reached in 
January.

Foreclosure-driven declines in prices have contributed to stabilizing the 
resales market. Distressed sales have made up as much as 50 percent of existing 
home purchases in recent months, according to the National Association of 
Realtors.

The biggest contraction in residential construction on record has helped 
builders trim the glut of properties on the market even as sales faltered. The 
number of unsold new houses dropped in March to the lowest level since 2002, 
according to Commerce figures.

Less Pessimistic

Builders are becoming less pessimistic. The National Association of Home 
Builders/Wells Fargo's sentiment index probably rose in May to its highest 
level in eight months, economists forecast a report tomorrow may show.

Still, construction firms continue to feel the pain of having to drop prices to 
spur demand. D.R. Horton Inc., the largest U.S. homebuilder by market value, on 
May 5 reported a quarterly loss that exceeded analysts' estimates as orders 
dropped 45 percent from a year earlier.

"Market conditions in the homebuilding industry are still challenging, 
characterized by rising foreclosures, high inventory levels of both new and 
existing homes, increasing unemployment, tight credit for homebuyers and 
eroding consumer confidence," said Chairman Donald Horton in a statement.

Financing also remains scarce, a survey of banks by the Federal Reserve showed 
this month. A larger share of lenders tightened terms on residential mortgages 
compared with the prior survey, the Fed said on May 4. At the same time, about 
35 percent of domestic respondents saw increased demand for prime mortgages, 
the first gain in at least two years.

Stocks, Sentiment

Last month's jump in the leading index would be the first since June 2008, and 
the biggest since November 2005. The 12 percent surge in the Standard & Poor's 
500 index average, and the biggest increase in consumers' economic outlook in 
more than two years propelled the gauge higher.

The Fed on May 20 will release the minutes of its April 29 monetary policy 
meeting, when it refrained from increasing purchases of securities, saying the 
economy was showing signs of stability.

The following day, a survey from the Fed Bank of Philadelphia may show 
manufacturing in eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey and Delaware 
contracted this month at the slowest rate since September, adding to signs the 
factory slump is easing.

Finally, the Labor Department may report May 21 that initial jobless claims 
fell in the week ended May 16 after the shutdown of plants by Chrysler LLC 
contributed to a jump in applications the prior week, economists forecast. 


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