Showing posts with label Home Sales. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Home Sales. Show all posts
ON THE RISE...NATIONALLY
Canada’s home sales back on the rise
Postmedia News
Mar 15, 2012
Following a rough start to 2012, home sales in Canada rebounded in February with a modest increase from the previous month.
The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) said Thursday that home sale rose by 1.4% between January and February, which helped recover roughly one-third of the 4.5% drop recorded the previous month.
Compared with the same reporting period the previous year, activity was 8.6% higher than February 2011. Over the first two months of 2012, some 61,772 homes were sold, which represents a 6.7% hike from the same period in 2011.
“The national rise in both sales activity and the number of newly listed homes beyond the normal seasonal increase provides clear evidence that Canadians are confident in housing market prospects,” CREA president Gary Morse said in a new release.
New home listings also jumped 1.9% in February, representing the highest level since May 2010. The association said a spike in new listings in Canada’s two busiest markets — Toronto and Montreal — helped counterbalance a decrease in listings in Vancouver, which is the country’s third-largest market.
CREA said that the balance between sales and new listings remains fairly equal.
On a year-over-year basis, average home sale prices were up fully two% in February 2012. The average price of all homes sold that month was $372,763.
The association said that the increase was partly due to a rise in high-end home sales in the Vancouver area, which was not anticipated. Single detached residences in the Toronto area also continue to fuel home gains.
LOOKING FOR A GOOD TIME?
Why it’s a good time to buy a home
By Mark Weisleder
Toronto Star Jan 27 2012
I believe there has never been a better time to buy a home. I’ve been in the industry for 28 years as a lawyer and I haven’t seen so many positive signs for housing, whether you are thinking or buying or locking in a mortgage.
Here’s why:
Mortgage rates at historic lows: They can’t get any lower. Four to five-year fixed mortgages at 3 per cent are unheard of. It is lower than the variable rate that most Canadians have been paying for years. Rates have nowhere to go but up, either later this year or next. If you are paying a variable interest rate, lock in now.
Canada’s appeal: This country has everything going for it — a stable banking and political environment, steady real estate market, the natural resources people want and few social tensions. That makes us a safe haven in a volatile world.
Our immigrant draw: Because of the above, we’re a draw for immigrants, often wealthy ones. When they get here, they need a home. So in my view while the real estate market may level off in some areas of Ontario, it should stay strong in most of the GTA and likely Canada’s other large urban centres as well.
Mortgage defaults: According to CMHC, over 99 per cent of Canadians pay their mortgages on time. It quite a different picture in the U.S. where 7 million homes are in foreclosure and perhaps another 7 million homeowners are under water. This represents almost 15 per cent of all homes. So while the American housing market will likely be weak for the next few years, this should not occur in Canada. Our banks are not dumping homes onto the market, so there is no downward pressure on prices.
Recourse Mortgages: In many U.S. states, if you can’t pay your mortgage, the only thing the bank can do is foreclose; they cannot sue you for any shortfall. So when homes go under water, owners give the keys back to the bank. In Canada, loans are almost all Recourse, meaning if you don’t pay and there is a shortfall, the lender can sue you for the difference. This is another reason why, in my opinion, even if times do get tough, Canadian homeowners will find a way to make the payments until things improve.
Income-to-price ratio: Another misleading statistic is that in major markets, like Toronto, the average price of a home is now 4.6 times the income of the average Canadian. This same statistic was found just before the U.S. and UK markets went into the tank. However, if you look at median incomes of Canadians against the median cost of homes, this average comes down to around 3.5, which is not dangerous. Using averages are wrong. A person receiving social assistance will not buy a home, and should not be included in any relevant statistic.
High consumer debt: The warnings about rising debt ratios must be examined carefully. The Governor of the Bank of Canada is worried that the average personal debt ratio is now 156 per cent in Canada. This means a household making $100,000 per year, owes $156,000, two-thirds of which is mortgage debt. Why is this so bad? At an interest rate of 3 or even 5 per cent, the amount needed to service the debt is manageable. Most people do not pay off their mortgages in one year. Still, this is another good reason to consolidate your debt now, at these low interest rates, and lock in.
No guarantees: Nobody can predict the future and there’s always the possibility of a major economic shock. Yet, in a U.S. presidential election year, politicians will do whatever is necessary to prevent it. If the economy goes into the tank, so do re-election chances. The U.S. is already showing signs of economic recovery.
No matter what, do not take on a monthly payment higher than what you can afford. Meet with your lender or mortgage broker in advance to figure out what you can afford before you start looking for a home. It may be the best time to buy, but you need to buy smart.
Photo By: alykat
RESALE NEWS
Calgary sees more home resales as average price drops
By Mario Toneguzzi
Calgary Herald November 30, 2011
Calgary's resale housing sales grew in October, but the average price dipped, according to the Conference Board of Canada.
In a report published Tuesday, the board said the seasonally adjusted annualized rate of sales in Calgary was 22,572 during the month, up from 22,344 in September and an increase from 19,524 in October 2010.
But the average price fell in October to $402,561 from $408,466 in September. A year ago it was $396,041.
As for new listings, the annualized rate in October decreased to 43,656 from 44,664 the previous month, but up from 42,960 in October 2010.
In October, the sales-to-new listings ratio in Calgary was 0.512. It was 0.471 in September and 0.455 a year ago. The conference board said Calgary can expect short-term year-over-year annual price growth of between five and seven per cent.
According to the latest Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. market outlook report, MLS sales in the Calgary region are forecast to increase by 2.3 per cent in 2012 to 22,700, while new listings are expected to decrease by 1.1. per cent to 43,700. The average MLS sales price is forecast to jump by 2.2 per cent in 2012 to $411,000 in the Calgary census metropolitan area.
The CMHC housing market outlook says despite many positive factors for real estate, "competing factors such as uncertainty in the global economy has kept some prospective buyers on the fence and will continue to temper any large increases in sales."
Photo By: Where To Willie
SALES ON THE RISE
Home sales, prices up in September
Garry Marr, Financial Post · Friday, Oct. 15, 2010
TORONTO — Housing sales rose in September for a second straight month while average prices reversed the falling trend with a 1.9% increase from August, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Friday.
The Ottawa-based group said sales in September climbed 3% from August on a seasonally adjusted basis. It was the highest number of sales since last May.
At the same time prices also showed some growth. The average sale price across the Multiple Listing Service last month was $331,089, on par with where it stood a year ago, and an increase from $324,928 in August.
"Supply and demand are rebalancing, and that's keeping prices steady in many markets," said Georges Pahud, president of CREA.
With demand improving slightly and the supply of homes falling, the number of months of inventory in the market dropped for a second straight month, the group said. New listings remain 15% below the peak reached in April.
CREA said two-thirds of local markets posted sales increases with Winnipeg, Calgary and Montreal standing out. However, compared with last year sales still lag across the country, down 19.8% in September from a year ago.
"Record level sales activity late last year and earlier this year is expected to further stretch year-over-year comparisons in the months ahead," the group said.
CREA said on a seasonally adjusted basis there was 6.6 months of inventory in the market nationally. That's down from 6.9 months in August and 7.2 months in July. The number of months of inventory represents the number of months it would take to sell inventories at the current rate of sales activity.
The interest-rate environment continues to help the housing market. While the prime lending rate has jumped with recent interest rate hikes from the Bank of Canada, effecting variable-rate mortgages, long-term rates continue to fall. Some lenders are now loaning money as low as 3.5% for a five-year, fixed-rate term.
"Mortgage lending rates eased in the third quarter, which helped support sales activity over the past couple of months," said Gregory Klump, chief economist with CREA. "Interest rates are going nowhere fast, so home ownership will remain within reach for many homebuyers."
LIVING UNDER JUNE
Construction of new homes in Calgary soared in June
By Mario Toneguzzi,
Calgary Herald July 9, 2010
CALGARY - Housing starts in the Calgary census metropolitan area soared in June compared with a year ago.
According to preliminary data released today by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., total starts during the month were 685, up by 57.8 per cent from June 2009.
Single-detached starts jumped to 531 from 374 last year, a 42 per cent hike while multiple-family starts rose by nearly 157 per cent from 60 in June 2009 to 154 last month.
To the end of June housing starts have increased in both categories year-to-date. There have been 4,617 total starts in the first half of this year compared wtih 1,981 for the same period a year ago. In the single-detached category, starts have increased from 1,549 last year to 3,335 this year while the multi-family category has seen a rise from 432 last year to 1,282 this year.
"This marks the 12th consecutive month where single-detached starts have increased on a year-over-year basis," said Richard Cho, senior market analyst for Calgary for the CMHC. "Builders in the last several months have taken the opportunity to replenish their inventory levels."
But Cho added that the year-over-year gains have started to moderate.
He said that despite the rise in multi-family production activity so far this year is behind last year's level.
"Elevated apartment inventories have contributed to fewer apartment projects breaking ground, keeping multi-family production below historial averages," said Cho.
In Alberta's seven largest cities, housing starts increased 33 per cent in June from 1,446 units in 2009 to 1,926 last month.
INVESTING IN WHAT WE LOVE
Invest in real estate and in your kids
Garry Marr, Financial Post
Published: Friday, May 07, 2010
Here's one way to tackle the red-hot Canadian housing market: Get someone to buy you a home.
That someone would be your parents. According to a new survey from TD Canada Trust, 10% of Canadians are considering buying a condominium for their adult children. A year ago, only 5% of parents thought about buying the kids a condo.
"It could be something that the parents are looking at as a long-term source of income, letting their children live it in for now," says Chris Wisniewski, associate vice-president of real estate and secured lending with TD.
It could also be that parents know condominium prices, like detached homes, have climbed to unprecedented levels, making it difficult for adult children to come up with a minimum 5% down payment, let alone the 20% needed to avoid costly mortgage default insurance.
Toronto condo research firm Urbanation Inc. says the average existing condominium in the city sold for $331,000 in the first quarter of 2010. Based on an average $369-per-square-foot price, that's a 900-square-foot unit.
For a new one, prices averaged $443 per square foot in the first quarter, so about $400,000 for that same-sized condo.
Ms. Wisniewski says low interest rates are convincing parents to step up and buy their children homes. The condominium represents an attractive alternative to those parents because the costs are stable.
"They know what the maintenance costs will be," she says. "[Parents] are thinking, ‘I'm not worried my children are too young to accept the responsibilities of home ownership if I set them up in an apartment. They don't have to recognize the responsibilities of maintenance in an apartment.' "
Parents might also see a condominium as a way to get their kids to start a family. The survey found 36% of Canadians are willing to raise families in a condo.
"One of the reasons for that is affordability," says Ms. Wisniewski. "Where are the new condominiums being built? They are being integrated in really nice existing neighbourhoods with all the infrastructure and all the schools and amenities."
Brian Johnston, president of developer Monarch Corp.'s Canadian division, says he doubts families will ever be integrated into the condominium stock, but does agrees with the premise that parents are helping to buy housing for their children. He says parents often want to keep children close to them so they'll chip in for a condominium in a nearby neighbourhood.
"How do we know they're helping out? They tell us when they are writing the cheques for the deposit," Mr. Johnston says.
Mr. Johnston said when it comes to recent immigrants to Canada, there is "lots of help" from family members to get that first home. "Condominiums are not inexpensive and they're going to need that help, particularly if the younger ones have not had time to build up their finances."
The builder has his own children and, based on today's prices, he figures he's going to have to lend a helping hand. "I don't expect them to be able to buy a condo ... before they are 30. That is just part of the deal [for parents]," says Mr. Johnston.
It's not like Baby Boomers don't have the cash. There have been endless studies that suggest the Boomers are set to inherit billions of dollars in the coming years from their parents.
Craig Alexander, deputy chief economist with TD Bank Financial Group, says there is no hard data to suggest how much parents are helping children, but they certainly have the financial capacity to lend a hand.
Canadians have $1.5-trillion invested in stocks and mutual funds with $500-billion of that figure in capital gains.
"The generation before the Baby Boomers were big savers and, as a consequence, there is a very large income transfer going to take place over time," says Mr. Alexander, adding it makes sense that some of that money is going to end up in housing and real estate.
For first-time buyers facing rising rates and increasing prices, the helping hand couldn't come at a better time - just ahead of tighter mortgage financing rules. Most of them probably hope their folks go from "considering" buying a condo to actually doing it.
Photo By: Remodeleze
TIME & RATES WAIT FOR NO MAN!
Time to lock in that mortgage rate?
Andrew Allentuck, Financial Post
Published: Thursday, May 06, 2010
If rates never changed very much, there would be no contest – the floating rate deal would win. But rates do rise and fall and therein lies the borrower's dilemma.
Borrowers with kids and an aging car fear that their ability to pay interest rates twice or thrice the current floating rates are limited. "The test is liquidity and risk tolerance," says Derek Moran, a registered financial planner who heads Smarter Financial Planning Ltd. in Kelowna, B.C. "People with ample liquidity can afford to take a chance on rising mortgage rates. It follows that those who lack liquidity feel some pressure to avoid drastic interest rate increases."
The point is not merely academic, for Canada, in spite of recent mortgage rate increases, is still at a relatively low point of rates over the last four decades. "There is more room for rates to go up than down," Moran points out.
The cost of making a decision to float or go fixed varies with the rate differences.
In 2008, Moshe Milevsky, Associate Professor of Finance at the Schulich School of Business at York University, and Brandon Walker, a research associate at the Individual Finance and Insurance Decisions Centre in Toronto, published a study that measured the direct and opportunity costs of going with either choice. "Over the long run, homeowners really do pay extra for fixed rate mortgages," they concluded.
The reason is intuitive. Lenders do not want to take the chance that when they have to refinance a loan that they will be stuck paying more than they are getting.
Mismatching what they lend with the cost of what they borrow can cut their profits and even lead to insolvency. So lenders attach what amounts to an interest rate insurance fee and bundle that into the price of money they lend on fixed terms.
Milevsky and Walker confirmed this explanation. "The study showed that a positive Maturity Value of Savings [the value of investing the difference between floating and fixed mortgages in 91-day T-bills] was positive the majority of the time, so the homeowner saved by using a variable-rate mortgage."
The amount of money that the homeowner can save by taking a chance on floating rates varied in the Milevsky and Walker study, depending on the time periods in question. But the average amount was impressive: $20,630 as of 2008. Put another way, floating allowed borrowers to cut the time it would take to pay off the mortgages by a year or more, in some cases as much as five years on 15-year amortizations.
Rational calculation and personal feeling are, of course, different things. A person with a fixed income and a great deal of debt may be reluctant to put a rate casino between himself and the lender and will therefore go with certainty, even at a high price.
It is also a matter of experience. "First time buyers tend to pay close attention to the cost of the mortgage," says Laura Parsons, Areas Manager of Specialized Sales – which includes mortgages, for the BMO Financial Group in Calgary. For them, the appeal of locking in is relatively high. Their mortgages are new, the amounts they owe are higher than they would be 10 or 15 years in future when the mortgage is substantially reduced, and their incomes, often early in their adult lives, are lower than they will be in future.
"First time home buyers are net debtors and they don't want to endanger their finances," suggests Adrian Mastracci, a portfolio manager and financial planner who heads KCM Wealth Management Inc. in Vancouver.
There are other strategies that the buyer can use to provide some rate insurance without taking on what Milevsky and Walker have demonstrated as the high cost of peace of mind.
"The buyer can take a variable rate mortgage but set payments higher than the minimum required" says Parsons. "That could be at the 5 year closed rate, which would mean a faster paydown and growing asset security while still keeping the low cost of the variable rate mortgage. Faster paydown is itself cost insurance if interest rates do rise."
Banks are nothing if not inventive in helping clients cope with the fixed versus floating dilemma. For example, TD Bank offers to give 5% of the amount borrowed on a five or six year fixed rate residential mortgage to the borrower. The program, aptly dubbed the "5% CashBack Mortgage," implicitly acknowledges that fixed rate loans can be more costly than variable rate ones.
For its part, RBC has a RateCapper Mortgage that builds on the initial low cost of a variable rate mortgage but limits the cost if rates shoot up. On a five year mortgage, the borrower will never pay more than the capped rate and if the variable rate, based on the prime rate, drops below the RateCapper mortgage maximum, the interest rate charged to the borrower also drops. The plan is a compromise and spreads interest rate risk. Many other lenders allow borrowers to mix fixed and variable rates, thus accomplishing a similar goal.
Plan selection, it turns out, is gender-related. According to a BMO survey, men, 44% of the time, are more likely than women to choose a fixed rate mortgage than women, who make that choice only 28% of the time. Women, it turns out, tend to make the better choice, for as BMO's analysis shows, "fixed rates were advantageous during only two periods – through the late 1970s and in the late 1980s, in both cases ahead of a period rising interest rates, as is the case now."
So where are interest rates headed? The yield curve, a line that links interest rates for periods of time from 1 day to 30 years, implies that rates will rise, but not very much.
There is no sense that we are returning to a period of double digit rates. Moreover, there are deflationary forces at work, notes Patricia Croft, chief economist of RBC Global Asset Management in Toronto. "The present crisis in European finance and the potential fizzling out of the present recovery in North American capital markets could presage falling inflation and even disinflation – the subsidence of rising prices and interest rates," she explains..
BMO forecasts that the rising Canadian dollar will put downward pressure on consumer prices, reflecting the fact that much of what Canadians eat and use is imported. Inflation could flare up, BMO's economists say, but there is a balanced risk of declining prices. For now, the Bank of Canada is being very cautious in its interest rate management commitments. For those who are strapped for cash, personal circumstance may dictate the choice of a fixed rate. But for everyone else, the folly of trying to make interest rate predictions over a business cycle and to predict both the short term rates and the long term rates along the yield curve should be apparent. No promises, of course, but the odds of saving money are with borrowers who choose variable rate plans or those that emulate them.
Photo By: Philipp Klinger
PEAKING YOUR INTEREST
Housing may have peaked
Gary Marr, Financial Post
Published: Thursday, April 15, 2010
The spring homebuying season has reached a fever pitch with a record number of "for sale" signs being placed on Canadian lawns for the month of March.
But there are indications the market has reached the peak with nowhere to go but down.
The Canadian Real Estate Association said yesterday that 97,663 properties were put on market last month, a 25% increase from the number of new listings in March a year ago. Since the beginning of the new year, there have been 233,402 homes put on the market, the best-ever first quarter for new listings.
With demand still strong, sales continue to soar. There were 49,256 units that traded hands in March, the second-best March on record, and a 40.8% rise from a year earlier.
Yet despite the huge increase in year-over-year sales, March was the fifth straight month that the percentage increase has declined. In some markets, sales are already falling. Seasonally adjusted sales in British Columbia dropped 17.8% from a quarter earlier and Alberta sales dropped 9.7% during the same period.
Phil Soper, chief executive of Royal LePage Real Estate Services, said affordability and consumer confidence drive the market. "The former has not eroded enough to affect the market and the latter has improved considerably," he said.
Still, he concedes the spring market may be the top for real estate. "It will be the top from an industry-volume perspective. It's the last hurrah for the pent-up demand in the market," said Mr. Soper, who expects prices to continue to rise, but more slowly.
Even with the increase in the supply of homes, sales are expected to remain strong this spring as homebuyers scramble before tougher mortgage rules, rising interest rates and the new HST in Ontario and British Columbia come into play - all by July 1.
Many in the industry concede, however, the spring market could be the last gasp before housing sales start to drop, along with prices. Few, however, are predicting a U.S.-style crash.
"If this isn't the top, we are very close to it in terms of sale activity and price," said Gregory Klump, chief economist with CREA.
Mr. Klump doesn't predict the market will reverse dramatically, but says year-over-year comparisons are going to continue to shrink for sales and prices.
Mr. Klump said prices at the high end of the market are going to start driving down because consumers in that segment are trying to beat the clock on all the changes coming.
New mortgage rules, which go into effect on April 19, will force consumers to borrow based on the five-year posted rate if they are locking in for a term less than five years. Previously, they could use the actual rate on their contract, meaning they could borrow more.
Banks have also raised long-term mortgage rates in the past two weeks, with a five-year, fixed-rate closed mortgage rising from 5.25% to 6.10%. The Bank of Canada is expected to raise its own benchmark rates shortly and that will affect consumers with floating-rate mortgages now based on a prime rate of 2.25%.
And the introduction of the harmonized sales tax on July 1 will raise costs for some services associated with buying a house, such as a real estate commission. It is coming only to British Columbia and Ontario, but Toronto and Vancouver are the most expensive real estate markets in the country and skew the national averages.
For now, the market still has some wind behind it. "Negotiations still favour sellers during the home-buying process in a number of major Canadian housing markets," said Georges Pahud, CREA's president.
"The rise in new listings means that buyers may shop around more before making an offer."
Photo by: Erik Twight
COMING UP ROSES IN FEBRUARY
Housing market shows 'momentum' in February
Real Estate Sales, Prices Firm Up
By Mario Toneguzzi, Calgary Herald
March 2, 2010
The local housing market showed signs of balance, not a bubble, in February, according to the Calgary Real Estate Board.
In releasing its official MLS numbers for the month, the board said sales and average prices increased in both the single-family home and condominium markets compared with year-ago levels.
"We're just pretty steady and we're getting some momentum, but that's fairly typical in a normal year and I don't even compare it to last year because last year wasn't a normal year," said board president Diane Scott.
"Right now, where we sit in February, it's pretty stable. It's a comfortable market and we're almost close to equal buyers and sellers."
Single-family home sales for February were 1,035 units, up 25.5 per cent from February 2009's 825 units. The average sale price hit $458,254, an increase of 10.3 per cent from last year's $415,568.
Also, condo sales were up a whopping 56.3 per cent to 536 units compared with 343 sales in February 2009. The average price also increased by 5.2 per cent, to $282,880 from $268,971.
Richard Cho, senior market analyst in Calgary for Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., said market watchers have to be careful when comparing February numbers with a year ago.
"In many ways it would be like comparing apples to oranges," Cho said.
"Market conditions now are stronger compared to this time last year, when conditions were more uncertain. We are still seeing steady demand for homes, especially for the entry-level product. Low mortgage rates continue to support demand for home ownership.
"The selection of homes for prospective buyers has also improved, with active listings trending up. The resale market has settled into balanced conditions, putting modest pressure on prices."
A year ago, Cho said, people were losing their jobs. They were waiting on the sidelines to see where the economy was going and where house prices were headed.
Now, with things improving and the economy and housing market stabilizing, prospective buyers are more comfortable with making larger purchases such as homes, added Cho.
Scott agreed the economic situation last year had an impact.
"We were in such a slump and there was no consumer confidence," she said. "It looked like we were going downhill for a long period of time.
"This year, the consumer confidence is up, the interest rates are low still and hopefully that will stay for a little while longer and afford-ability is there. A lot of people who were sitting on the fence last year are coming off."
She said the Calgary housing market has shifted from fragile to fervent in just over 12 months. The city is also seeing a moderate rise in the number of competing offers on homes.
For towns just outside Calgary, sales were up 55.8 per cent to 335 units from 215 a year ago but the average sale price dropped by 4.82 per cent to $353,912 from $371,829.
In the country residential market, which includes acreages, sales increased by 84.38 per cent, going from 32 last year to 59 last month, with the average price remaining virtually the same at $748,506.
Scott said many first-time buyers are seeing this as the time to take advantage of record-low interest rates.
"We will see a rise in both our inventory and demand this spring -- and we expect both to stay in a healthy balance. Prices will edge up as the year progresses, but the rise in prices will be moderate," added Scott.
Single-family listings in Calgary added for the month of February totalled 2,154, a 4.72 per cent jump from a year ago.
New listings for condominiums for February were 1,109, up 24.3 per cent from last year.
"The story of the housing market is all about interest rates at the moment," said Scott. "When the rates will rise is the wild card. Canada's economic recovery showed marked improvement in the final quarter of last year. This will put pressure on the Bank of Canada to begin raising rates sooner than planned to curb inflation."
Calgary Home Sales In February
Single-family homes 2009 2010 Change
Sales 825 1,035 25.5%
Average Price $415,568 $458,254 10.3%
Median Price $375,000 $411,000 9.6%
Condominiums 2009 2010 Change
Sales 343 536 56.3%
Average Price $268,971 $282,880 5.2%
Median Price $249,900 $265,900 6.4%
Source: Calgary Real Estate Board
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BALANCE IN 2010

CREA forecasts record home sales in 2010
Garry Marr, Financial Post
Published: Monday, February 08, 2010
The Canadian Real Estate Association now says 2010 will be a record year for home sales.
The Ottawa-based group, which represents about 100 boards across the country, said sales this year will climb 13.3% from 2009. The market will also surpass the 2007 peak by 1.2%.
"Low interest rates are expected to boost housing demand in the first half of the year, resulting in strong annual sales growth in nearly all provinces in 2010, led by British Columbia and Ontario," said CREA in a release.
Part of the reason for the surge in activity in the first half of 2010 is being attributed to the harmonization sales tax that comes into effect in Ontario and British Columbia on July 1. Consumers are expected to try and beat that deadline.
However, by 2011, rising interest rates are forecast to put a dent in the housing market. CREA sales will drop by 7.1% in 2011.
"Although interest rates are expected to rise, they will still be low enough to keep affordability within reach for many homebuyers requiring mortgage financing, and support overall housing demand," said Dale Ripplinger, president of CREA.
Prices will rise by 5.4% in 2010, bringing the average price to $337,500. The national average price continues to be skewed by strong markets in B.C. and Ontario which has the two most expensive cities in the country to live in. By 2011, the national average price will drop by 1.5%.
"Improved financial market stability and recovering global economic growth mean that home sales activity in 2010 is unlikely to repeat the dive it experienced in late 2008 and early 2009," said Gregory Klump. chief economist at CREA. "A downward trend in national sales activity combined with an increase in listings will result in a more balanced market. Although builders are understandably more upbeat than they were during the depth of the recession, speculative building will likely continue to be held in check. As a result, while the real estate market will become more balanced, Canada will continue to avoid the massive realignment in housing supply and demand experienced in the U.S."
Garry Marr, Financial Post
Published: Monday, February 08, 2010
The Canadian Real Estate Association now says 2010 will be a record year for home sales.
The Ottawa-based group, which represents about 100 boards across the country, said sales this year will climb 13.3% from 2009. The market will also surpass the 2007 peak by 1.2%.
"Low interest rates are expected to boost housing demand in the first half of the year, resulting in strong annual sales growth in nearly all provinces in 2010, led by British Columbia and Ontario," said CREA in a release.
Part of the reason for the surge in activity in the first half of 2010 is being attributed to the harmonization sales tax that comes into effect in Ontario and British Columbia on July 1. Consumers are expected to try and beat that deadline.
However, by 2011, rising interest rates are forecast to put a dent in the housing market. CREA sales will drop by 7.1% in 2011.
"Although interest rates are expected to rise, they will still be low enough to keep affordability within reach for many homebuyers requiring mortgage financing, and support overall housing demand," said Dale Ripplinger, president of CREA.
Prices will rise by 5.4% in 2010, bringing the average price to $337,500. The national average price continues to be skewed by strong markets in B.C. and Ontario which has the two most expensive cities in the country to live in. By 2011, the national average price will drop by 1.5%.
"Improved financial market stability and recovering global economic growth mean that home sales activity in 2010 is unlikely to repeat the dive it experienced in late 2008 and early 2009," said Gregory Klump. chief economist at CREA. "A downward trend in national sales activity combined with an increase in listings will result in a more balanced market. Although builders are understandably more upbeat than they were during the depth of the recession, speculative building will likely continue to be held in check. As a result, while the real estate market will become more balanced, Canada will continue to avoid the massive realignment in housing supply and demand experienced in the U.S."
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