US housing starts fell to 1.356 million in February. This was down from 1.487 million in the previous month.
The month-on-month change shows a decline in new residential construction starts. The data compares February with the prior month’s level.
Housing Starts Signal Growth Cooling
We see that the February 2026 housing starts data showed a sharp decline. This figure, dropping to 1.356 million, is a significant miss from the previous month and suggests high interest rates are finally cooling the economy. It serves as a strong signal that the economic resilience we observed through much of 2025 might be fading.
In response, we should anticipate a shift in Federal Reserve policy expectations. Traders will likely begin pricing in earlier interest rate cuts, so positions that benefit from falling yields, such as long-term Treasury futures, are now more attractive. As of late April, the market was still only pricing in one cut in the fourth quarter, creating a clear opportunity if this economic weakness continues.
We should consider defensive positions in the equity markets given that housing is a leading economic indicator. This means buying put options on broad market indices like the SPX or on sector ETFs directly exposed to construction, such as XHB for homebuilders. We’ve seen mortgage applications fall for three consecutive weeks in April 2026, reinforcing this bearish outlook for housing-related stocks.
Volatility Hedging Amid Policy Uncertainty
This conflict between slowing growth and the Fed’s recent comments on sticky inflation will likely increase market uncertainty. An increase in expected volatility makes buying call options on the VIX index a sensible hedge over the next several weeks. Historically, sharp drops in leading indicators like housing precede periods of higher market volatility, a pattern we saw during the slowdowns in both 2006 and 2018.