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Tag Archives: Canadian housing market

Canadian housing picture looking a little sunnier

Com­pos­ite house price index shows gains after six-month string of declines

Susan Pigg – Toronto Star

The Cana­dian hous­ing pic­ture looked a lit­tle sun­nier in March, despite con­cerns on the Toronto condo front, as the Teranet-National Bank com­pos­ite house price index increased 0.4% over Feb­ru­ary after six straight months of decline.

Com­ment: Which is amaz­ing, since we still have the same mort­gage rules that cause the ini­tial drop. But now, we are turn­ing it around, a lot like I said would hap­pen. I said last sum­mer, just wait and watch, peo­ple will just save up more for longer and then start buy­ing again. Which is what it appears is now happening.

Most of the country’s major urban cen­tres recorded increases in house prices in March, year over year, which pushed the com­pos­ite index up 2.6%, accord­ing to fig­ures released Wednesday.

Com­ment: Toronto has had price increases every month, even with the lower sales.

The Toronto house price index was up 4.7% over March 2012, despite a sig­nif­i­cant soft­en­ing in the condo sec­tor and the fact house prices, over­all, have declined 1.8% since their peak last Sep­tem­ber, said National Bank econ­o­mist Marc Pinsonneault.

Com­ment: Con­dos are back up, both in sales vol­ume and in price. Don’t call the condo mar­ket dead just yet! And we have not yet hit the peak of the year, for prices. You CANNOT com­pare months, they are all dif­fer­ent. April is way higher than Decem­ber, same as August is lower than Sep­tem­ber. Com­pare Sep­tem­ber 2013 to Sep­tem­ber 2012 if you want a proper com­par­i­son. But he does not, which is why he is using num­bers that he knows will give a skewed result.

There is only one area of real soft­ness and that is the condo apart­ment mar­ket,” stressed Pin­son­neault. “For con­dos, you have the worst mar­ket con­di­tions, out­side of the reces­sion, that we’ve seen since 1998.”

Com­ment: No, that is not true. And a rather dumb and out­ra­geous thing to say.

In March there were 4.3 months of condo inven­tory on the mar­ket, much of it in high­rise tow­ers that are planned or under con­struc­tion. That’s the high­est active sales-to-listings ratio — a key barom­e­ter of the health of a hous­ing mar­ket — since the unprece­dented 5.5 months worth of con­dos that were on the mar­ket dur­ing the 2008 reces­sion, said Pin­son­neault in a tele­phone interview.

Com­ment: Sure, low­est condo mar­ket since 2008, that I can accept (though it is chang­ing in April, this might be totally out of date in a cou­ple of days when we get the full data for April), but worst since 1998 is sim­ply a fabrication.

The his­toric median level is 3.1 months.

The fact that hous­ing starts have declined sig­nif­i­cantly just since the start of this year shows that devel­op­ers are delay­ing projects for fear of dump­ing yet more con­dos on an already over­loaded mar­ket, noted Pinsonneault.

Com­ment: NO. It does not. It only proves that they are delay­ing things. Unless you have asked every sin­gle one of them why they are delay­ing, you can­not make such a blan­ket state­ment. The fact that every crane you see means 80% of units sold, and build­ings com­plete with 90% sold – what is being dumped on a mar­ket? The new ones are sell­ing like hot cakes, it is just the resales that are slower. And now they are pick­ing up – mid-April saw list­ings drop, sales rise and prices increase. That is the truth of the matter.

But I still think some cor­rec­tion is in the off­ing,” albeit prob­a­bly less than the 3–5% National Bank is expect­ing for Cana­dian house prices over­all this year, he added.

Com­ment: Wrong. Same “cor­rec­tion” every­one has been pre­dict­ing (except the one ridicu­lour 25% claim) for years now. Hasn’t hap­pened. Ain’t gonna. Even with Vancouver’s long slow plum­met, it is still NOT pulling the national aver­age down.

When it comes to the single-family home mar­ket in Toronto, how­ever, demand con­tin­ued to out­strip sup­ply in March. That has buoyed house prices and seen the active sales-to-listings ratio drop to 2.2 months, below his­toric aver­ages closer to 3%, said Pinsonneault.

Com­ment: Demand out­strips sup­ply every month, that is why prices keep ris­ing. That is why there are bid­ding wars on rentals. And exactly why the entire mar­ket is healthy and will keep increasing.

Ter­anet com­piles the com­pos­ite house price index, which had fallen each of the last six months in the wake of tighter lend­ing rules and min­i­mal eco­nomic activ­ity, by look­ing at select home sales in 11 major markets.

Toronto was among nine regions that saw increases in index prices in March, year over year, rang­ing from a high of 5.9% in Que­bec City and 5.7% in Cal­gary to 2.3% in Ottawa and 1.5% in Montreal.

Van­cou­ver and Vic­to­ria were the only two cities in the sur­vey to see declines over last March. They were 1.5% and 3.5% respectively.

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Con­tact the Jef­frey Team for more infor­ma­tion – 416−388−1960

Lau­rin & Natalie Jef­frey are Toronto Real­tors with Cen­tury 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these arti­cles, they just repro­duce them here for peo­ple
who are inter­ested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

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Housing market headed for soft landing, agency, CEOs say

Tara Perkins & Grant Robertson – The Globe and Mail

While the drop in Canadian house sales that began in the second half of 2012 is likely to continue, the market is headed for a soft landing rather than a crash, one of the country’s largest real estate agencies and a number of bank CEOs predicted Tuesday.

Their comments came as the latest data suggest that the steep drop in year-over-year home sales persisted through to the end of the year.

Comment: Be interesting to see how they change their tune now that things have reversed and are rising again…

“The number of existing homes sold fell by an average of 18.6% year-over-year using a sample that includes Vancouver, Toronto, Ottawa, Calgary, Edmonton, Kitchener, the Fraser Valley, Victoria, Saskatoon and Regina, according to a composite number compiled by Bloomberg,” economists at Bank of Nova Scotia wrote in a research note. The data, they added, are “not pretty.”

But high-profile voices in the banking and real estate sectors suggested that the impact of the sales downturn will not be severe.

“Our expectation is we’ve got this sort of soft-landing scenario on the real estate side,” Royal Bank of Canada CEO Gord Nixon told investors at a conference in Toronto on Tuesday. “We have seen a slowdown in sales and we’ve certainly seen a slowdown in mortgage demand, but price levels are relatively stable.”

Comment: If not still rising, albeit slowly.

Speaking at the same conference, Bank of Montreal CEO Bill Downe said that a drop in house prices is to be expected. “House prices may just stagnate for a couple of years, and that’s the definition of a soft landing,” he said.

Comment: And flat prices are a far cry from the stupid 25% drop predicted by some. I wonder how mid-January’s 4% price rise figures into their calculations – if at all.

Real estate agency Royal LePage is forecasting a mild correction in the coming months. It believes that sales in the first half of the year will be slower than last year, tempering the pace at which prices have been rising. But it is predicting that by the end of 2013, the average national house price will be 1% higher.

Fewer home owners listed their properties late last year as more potential buyers moved to the sidelines, Phil Soper, CEO of Royal LePage, said in a press release. The slowdown in listings kept inventory levels lower, and supported house values, he said.

Comment: And now that people have saved up, they will re-enter the market. This will prompt more listings, which will fuel higher sales volume and that will push prices up.

The real estate agency said that it saw the price of standard two-storey houses rise 4% year-over-year in the fourth quarter, to $390,444, while the national average price of condominiums sold increased 1% to $239,374.

Royal LePage expects the year-over-year declines in sales that characterized the latter part of 2012 to continue. Sales volumes should improve a bit in the third quarter, it said, becoming essentially flat when it comes to year-over-year comparisons, and then show year-over-year growth in the final months of the year.

Comment: First half sales will be slower, since Q1 and Q2 2012 were fairly hectic. But the second half of 2013 will be higher than 2012, as that part of the year slowed significantly.

“With economic fundamentals such as employment levels improving, we expect this cyclical correction to be short-lived,” Mr. Soper said.

Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Nesbitt Burns, told reporters on a conference call Tuesday that a soft landing appears to be under way in most regions of the country in the wake of a decade-long boom.

“We expect it to continue this year, with sales and housing starts moderating further and prices generally stabilizing,” he said, adding that the market will be supported by factors such as moderate job growth and steady immigration. “Most importantly, demand will be supported by continued low interest rates with the Bank of Canada likely on hold for another year,” he said.

On the downside, the market will be restrained by elevated household debt, moderately high valuations, little pent-up demand and, most importantly, tighter mortgage rules, he added.

Royal LePage is predicting the average house price in Vancouver will decline by 3% this year, while most parts of the country will see small price increases. Gains will be larger in Calgary (2.5%) and Regina (4%), it predicts. It expects average prices to rise by 1% in Toronto.

—————————————————————————————————–
Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960

Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

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  • RE/MAX forecasts ‘moderate’ 2013

    Jemima Codrington – Canadian Real Estate Wealth

    After a robust run, Canada’s single-family market is finally headed for a slowdown in 2013, according to a new forecast, although pinning down demand for multi-unit properties may be more challenging.

    The RE/MAX Housing Market Outlook 2013 argues “moderation, not correction” lies ahead for 2013, a reversal from the trend of boom and development that has developed over recent years.

    Gurinder Sandhu, executive VP and regional director of RE/MAX Ontario-Atlantic Canada, said in the report that moderation, not a correction, lies ahead for 2013.

    “Home sales have moderated, but remain within healthy levels,” he said. “Greater optimism is expected to return next year, as the economy marks further improvement. Canadians appear to be reigning in their spending, heeding cautionary statements by the country’s financial leaders. We believe that will only serve to shore up the already healthy framework of the Canadian housing market in 2013.”

    In short, investors can expect much the same market for their single-family house and condo properties, although most analysts predict multifamily demand will continue to buck the slowing trend.

    The report forecasts that 454,000 will exchange hands in 2013, falling 1% from the performance in 2012. Average house prices are expected to increase marginally by 1% too, up to $366,500.

    Many markets are expected to remain on par with 2012 statistics, with particular strength noted in the West.

    The report projects sales will be the same in 65% of markets, including Calgary and Regina. The latter has also been tapped to show the greatest price growth, 8%, with several Ontario cities following closely behind, including Hamilton, Burlington and the GTA.

    Price gains are predicted to be strongest in Halifax, St. John’s, Regina and Kingston, while metro markets such as Vancouver and Quebec will see considerable fall back.

    In spite of the slowing pace, the 2013 forecast paints a decidedly stable, if not sensational, picture for the market.

    “Despite all the negativity surrounding residential real estate, the sky is not falling,” said Sandhu.

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    Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information – 416-388-1960

    Laurin & Natalie Jeffrey are Toronto Realtors with Century 21 Regal Realty.
    They did not write these articles, they just reproduce them here for people
    who are interested in Toronto real estate. They do not work for any builders.

    —————————————————————————————————–


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