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US home building weak in June, PU buyers cautious

  • Market: Petrochemicals
  • 18/07/25

US housing permits and starts in June remained below already depressed year-earlier levels, keeping polyurethane (PU) buyers cautious.

Permits for privately-owned units, a sign of future construction, were at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 1.397mn units in June, according to the US Census Bureau and Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) data. This is down by 4.4pc from the same time a year prior but marks a slight 0.2pc increase from revised figures in May.

Housing starts saw less of a decline, slipping by 0.5pc to an annual rate of 1.321mn units in June from a year earlier. Starts in June jumped by 4.6pc from May, led by a near 31pc monthly rise in new buildings of five or more units. Single-family housing starts in June declined by 10pc to 883,000 units from June 2024 and retracted by 4.6pc from the prior month.

The latest builder sentiment survey for July sustained a weak view for the single-family housing market despite a nominal increase. The reading reversed the downward sentiment registered in June, rising by 1 point to 33, according to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI). This is still well below builder confidence at the start of the year when January registered at 47.

Residential construction has lagged all year whereas commercial and government construction projects have driven summer PU demand, according to market participants. The building blocks of polyurethanes, such as isocyanates, go into insulation, roofing applications and carpet underlay.

Market participants saw the usual uptick for public school projects in June as students are out on summer holiday and anticipate it to slow by August. Renovation and re-roofing projects for polymeric MDI (PMDI) into insulation board rose in June while demand into spray foam insulation, typically used in residential settings, declined. Overall, many participants reported demand was up from the spring but not at normal levels for this time of year.

A few price increase announcements came out in May for PMDI for June or July implementation depending on contracts. The announcements were out with the idea that tariffs would slow imported volumes and tighten domestic supply during the peak demand season. However, this did not occur in June as participants saw a smaller than normal lift in demand and ample domestic supply available. Argus assessed June PMDI contract prices flat from the month before.


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