THE LOGICAL SONG
Housing market to continue to defy logic
Garry Marr
Financial Post, Dec. 6, 2011
Even one of Canada’s leading real estate companies agrees the rising housing market may not appear to make much sense.
But appearances are deceiving and Re/Max says both sales and average prices will continue to climb in 2012.
“Canadian residential real estate defied conventional logic and outperformed expectations in 2011,” the company said in its year-end report on the market.
Re/Max expects 2011 to finish with prices up 7% and the average home across the country selling for $363,000. The market won’t be as robust in 2012 but consumers can still expect another 2% jump in prices.
Sales figure for 2011 are forecast to climb by 3% from a year earlier with 460,000 homes having changed hands by year end. For 2012, expect less than a 1% increase in activity with only an additional 4,500 sales.
“The Canadian housing market has demonstrated tremendous resilience in recent years but 2011 stands out,” said Michael Polzler, executive vice-president of Re/Max Ontario-Atlantic Canada. “Instead of responding to economic concerns both here and abroad with a retreat in sales and prices, residential real estate markets actually experienced an upswing in the volatile third and fourth quarter.”
Re/Max looked at 26 markets across the country and predicts 23 will show an increase in average price for the year. Sales were up in 22 of those 26 markets. The company says 81% of markets studied will see price increases in 2012.
Among the reasons cited for the Canadian housing market’s continued strength against the odds has been population growth which has gone up by 11% since 2000. Re/Max notes by 2031, the country will have 42 million people.
“Population growth and immigration are major factors expected to prop-up housing demand and household formation in the coming years,” says the company.
Condominiums are expected to continue to garner a growing share of the housing market with investment and income-producing properties in high demand. Low vacancy rates are said to have driven those markets in 2011 and those conditions are expected to continue.
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