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    US construction spending beats expectations in April

    U.S. construction spending increased more than expected in April, boosted by single-family homebuilding, though rising mortgage rates amid ‌the war with Iran continued to cast a shadow over the housing ‌market.

    The Commerce Department's Census Bureau said on Monday that construction spending rose 0.4% after a downwardly ​revised 0.2% increase in March. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast construction spending gaining 0.2% after a previously reported 0.6% rise in March.

    Construction spending increased 0.9% on a year-over-year basis in April. Spending on private construction projects advanced 0.4% after ‌gaining 0.2% in the prior ⁠month.

    Investment in residential construction climbed 0.8% after rising 0.6% in March. Spending on new single-family housing projects increased 1.4%.

    Mortgage rates ⁠have shot up as the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran stoked inflation. The popular 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 6.53% last week, a nine-month high, data from mortgage finance ​agency ​Freddie Mac showed. It averaged 5.98% at ​the end of February, when the ‌war started, as Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae expanded purchases of mortgage-backed securities.

    Rising mortgage rates are weighing on demand for housing and constraining builders' ability to break ground on new single-family housing projects. Builders are also facing higher costs from tariffs, land and labor shortages.

    Spending on multi-family housing units, which account for ‌a small share of the housing market, ​fell 0.3% in April.

    Investing.com