CLIMBING HIGHER!




Financial Post · Dec. 15, 2011

Canada’s housing market is still chugging along steadily as sales activity nudged higher and prices continued to climb in November, data from the Canadian Real Estate Association said Thursday.


Sales activity rose a seasonally adjusted 0.5% in November, compared with the month before, as about 35,000 houses changed hands.

The national average price increased 4.6%, but that is the smallest increase since January.

Year-to-date sales remained in line with 10-year averages as 432,048 homes have been resold so far in 2011, up 2.1% from year-ago levels.

The sector is showing some signs of slowing down, however, as the number of newly listed homes declined 3.4% between October and November.

That said, actual national home sales figures (not seasonally adjusted) in November actually moved 7% above the 10-year average, the fourth-highest level on record for the month.

“National sales activity picked up late last year, and November’s results suggest that a similar trend may be playing out again this year,” Gregory Klump, chief economist with CREA, said in a release.

Interest rates are expected to remain low for the foreseeable future, so the housing sector will be closely watched for signs of excess, he said.

“That said, current trends for resale housing and new home construction suggest that tightened mortgage regulations are working as intended and fostering economic stability,” he said.

Photo By: Travis Atwood