Housing starts jumped by 19% to a 1.427 million annual rate in June, compared with expectations for a smaller increase, with single-family housing starts lower and multi-family starts sharply higher.
Building permits fell by 3% to a 1.367 million rate in June. Both single-family and multi-family permits declined. Homes permitted but not started decreased by 3%, suggesting starts could slow in the coming months.
The number of homes under construction declined but completions surged in the month, which should add to supply of homes for sale in the near term. Completions were 1.5% above their year-ago level.
Import prices rose by 0.3% in June and were up 0.5% when a 0.7% drop in petroleum prices is excluded.
Export prices fell by 0.6% in June and were down 0.7% excluding a 0.2% gain in agricultural prices.
June industrial production rose by 0.1% after a 0.1% gain in May, with manufacturing production flat overall and down 0.1% excluding a 0.7% gain in motor vehicle and parts production.
Utilities output rose by 0.4% on a gain in electricity production that was offset by a decline in natural gas production. Mining production increased by 0.4%.
The preliminary Michigan Sentiment index rose to 54.4 in July from 49.5 in June, the highest level since February, with gains in both the current conditions and expectations readings.
Michigan said that inflation expectations improved at the one-year horizon and was unchanged at the five-year horizon.
The Q2 GDP nowcast estimate from the St. Louis Fed is for a 2.058% gain, revised up from 1.717% gain in the previous estimate, while the Q2 GDP nowcast estimate from the Atlanta Fed is for a 1.7% gain, unrevised from the previous estimate.