New Zealand building consents for residential housing rose 7.6 per cent in December, taking the annual level of new permits issued by local councils to a six-year high.
New dwelling consents, including apartments, rose to a seasonally adjusted 2,169 in December from 2,016 a month earlier, according to Statistics New Zealand. Excluding apartments and retirement village units, which are typically volatile from month to month, seasonally adjusted consents climbed 11 per cent to 1,762, the highest level since February 2008.
Annual residential issuance rose 30 per cent to an unadjusted 21,300 in 2013 from a year earlier, the most since 2007 when 25,590 permits were issued. Of that, 18,892 new houses received consents, up 25 per cent on the year, and 2,408 new apartments were consented, a gain of 38 per cent.
The annual gain in new dwelling consents was driven by increases in Auckland and Christchurch, the country's two biggest cities, whose property markets have been bubbling away due to a lack of housing stock.
"The construction sector ended 2013 on a high note, with residential building consents much stronger than expected in December," Westpac Banking Corp senior economist Michael Gordon said in a note. "The Canterbury rebuild continues to dominate the totals, but the re-emergence of the Auckland apartment market is a notable recent trend."