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Tag Archives: industry group

National real estate association adjusts its outlook, says sales will rise

By Kim Covert, Postmedia News

Stable interest rates and rising prices in Vancouver have proved to be positive factors for Canada’s housing industry, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association, which had forecast declining sales but now expects them to increase overall in 2011.

Sales and housing prices actually dropped in July from the previous month – sales edged down by 0.1%, and the national average price of a home during the month was $361,181 – the lowest it’s been since January, CREA said, though it’s 9.3% higher than in July 2010. While year-to-date sales are 1.6% below last year’s figures, transactions are up 12.3% from the same month last year.

“This increase reflects weakened activity in July 2010, when levels for the month reached their lowest point since 2002,” CREA said.

The Ottawa-based industry group represents about 100 boards across the country.

While it had been forecasting a slowdown, it now says there will be 450,800 sales in 2011 – a 1% increase from a year ago. It says rising prices in Vancouver have helped push its forecast for the average sale price in 2011 to $363,500, a 7.2-per-cent increase from a year ago.

“While there had been some talk of potential interest rate increases, that hasn’t happened,” said CREA president Gary Morse. “In fact, rates have actually come down, and are now expected to remain low for the remainder of this year and into 2012.”

CREA expects sales to fall less than one% in 2012, while prices will flatten.

“Canadian housing remains surprisingly robust, thanks to still-low interest rates and solid job growth,” Douglas Porter, deputy chief economist at BMO Capital Markets wrote in a note responding to CREA’s data.

“While the recent financial market turmoil may temporarily weigh on activity, sales should ultimately find support from continued exceptionally low borrowing costs.”

Sonya Gulati, an economist with TD Economics, says while low interest rates will continue to support sales, the bank is still forecasting a slowdown in housing market activity.

“With uncertainty permeating markets regarding the state of the global economic recovery, we continue to expect that real estate activity with temper over the next 18 to 24 months,” Gulati wrote in a note. Prices in Toronto rose 0.8% in July over June’s figures – though sales declined 0.8% – and while prices and sales both declined in Vancouver, by 2.5% and 3.2%, respectively, “going forward, a correction is ripe for these cities in order to bring both markets in line with balanced territory,” Gulati said, though pricing declines will be gradual, with the biggest cuts coming in late 2012 and early 2013.

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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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Canada September existing home sales rise, prices stable

Reuters

Sales of exist­ing homes in Canada rose in Sep­tem­ber from August, edg­ing up for a sec­ond straight month, the Cana­dian Real Estate Asso­ci­a­tion said on Friday.

The indus­try group said a total of 33,913 homes changed hands in Sep­tem­ber, up 3% from August, and the high­est level since May. Com­pared with a year ear­lier, how­ever, sales vol­ume was down 20.1%.

Sea­son­ally adjusted sales were higher in two-thirds of the mar­kets tracked by the asso­ci­a­tion, led by Win­nipeg, Cal­gary, and Montreal.

Ana­lysts say the Cana­dian hous­ing mar­ket is sta­bi­liz­ing as it cools off after help­ing to drive the econ­omy out of reces­sion last year and early this year.

Most big Cana­dian banks low­ered their five-year fixed rate mort­gages this week by 0.10% to 5.29%, a move that may con­tinue to attract homebuyers.

Com­ment: And mort­gage bro­kers are offer­ing fixed rates as low as 3.49%!

This, together with recent devel­op­ments in exist­ing home sales activ­ity, sig­nal the like­li­hood that we are closer to a bal­anced mar­ket posi­tion than pre­vi­ously envis­aged,” said TD Bank econ­o­mist Shahrzad Mobasher Fard. “Some firm­ing up in exist­ing home sales and prices may con­se­quently be in sight.”

Risks include a slow­ing econ­omy and ris­ing house­hold indebt­ed­ness, the econ­o­mist noted.

The national aver­age price dipped 0.2% in August from a year ear­lier to $331,089 from $331,683. It was the sec­ond straight month that prices were about even with lev­els in 2009.

The num­ber of new list­ings rose 0.7% from the pre­vi­ous month, and remain 15% below the peak reached in April.

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

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Canada home resale price index up, no crash seen

* Month-on-month price rise of 0.3% in March

* Prices in four out of six metropolitan markets rise

* Canadian Real Estate Association says home market not headed for U.S.-style crash

Ka Yan Ng – Reuters

Canadian home resale prices climbed in March for an 11th straight month, but the gain was one of the smallest since prices began rising last year, according to a report on Wednesday.

The Teranet-National Bank Composite House Price Index, which measures price changes for repeat sales of single-family homes, showed overall prices rose 0.3% in March from February.

“The broad slowing of monthly gains is consistent with a general loosening of resale-market conditions across the country. For some months now, homes have been coming on the market faster than they have been selling,” the report said.

March’s gain was only a tick ahead of February’s 0.2% increase, which was the smallest monthly gain since the end of a recession-induced price slump.

The report tracks six metropolitan areas: Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, Vancouver, Montreal and Halifax. The index has been rising for almost a year.

Prices in four of the markets rose from the month before, led by a 1.4% gain in Halifax. Montreal and Vancouver both advanced 0.6%, and Ottawa climbed 0.1%.

Toronto prices were little changed on the month.

Calgary fell for a third month in a row, with March prices down 0.3% from February.

Overall, the Teranet index showed prices were up 11.6% from a year earlier.

The index offers more evidence that Canada’s real estate market could soon start to cool, thanks to increased housing supply and interest rates that are widely expected to rise through the latter half of the year.

The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) said last week that home resales slowed in April while new listings climbed.

CREA also released a report on Wednesday that said Canada would avoid a U.S.-style housing price retreat, mostly because of solid mortgage market trends.

The industry group described the warnings of a U.S. style correction — a massive oversupply due to a surge in mortgage defaults — as “overwrought.”

“Canada will avoid a massive oversupply of homes and a sharp drop in housing demand,” CREA’s chief economist, Gregory Klump, said.

“Canada’s solid mortgage market trends, conservative lending practices, and prudent borrowing by home buyers mean that Canada will avoid a U.S.-style housing price correction.”

CIBC World Markets said on Tuesday that “stabilizing forces are already at play” in the housing market, and that higher interest rates will lead to a modest decline in home prices, probably between 5% and 10%, in the coming year or two.

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

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