The DMO has announced it will be looking to sell GBP1.6bln of the 1.125% Sep-35 linker (ISIN: GB00BT7HZZ68) at its auction next Tuesday, February 25.
US DATA: Tariff Threats Curb Homebuilder Enthusiasm
Feb-18 15:24
The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI) fell more than expected in February's survey, to 42 (46 expected, 47 prior), a 5-month low. And future sales expectations (6-months ahead) dropped 13 points to 46, to a 14-month low, after having surged post-election to a 32-month high 66 in December. Present sales pulled back to 46 from January's 9-month high 50, with prospective buyer traffic likewise dropping to 29 from 32 prior, both marking 5-month lows.
Just as the promise of "pro-development policies, particularly for regulatory reform" (per NAHB) boosted confidence in late 2024, "policy uncertainty and cost factors created a reset for 2025 expectations in the most recent HMI". Namely: tariffs.
The NAHB notes that "builder responses collected prior to a pause for the proposed tariffs on goods from Canada and Mexico yielded a lower HMI reading of 38, while those collected after the announced one-month pause produced a score of 44", with softwood lumber and applicances named specifically.
The report also cited "elevated mortgage rates" and "high housing costs" as factors.
Though not singled out by the NAHB as a factor, the West of the country which includes fire-stricken California saw a 7 point drop to a 14-month low (35), though all regions saw lower readings, with the pullback in the Northeast (17 points to 48, a 6-month low) marking the biggest monthly drop since February 2021.
The NAHB's index tends to be a good leading indicator of building permits and thus residential investment, which is seen contributing to overall GDP growth in Q1 albeit much less than in Q4 2024.
As such, the "soft" data so far is pointing to policy uncertainty potentially dampening activity in residential construction, though ultimately the "hard" results will be impacted by the policies that are implemented.