Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Average Home Prices To Fall In 3 Oil-producing Provinces Next Year: CREA

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Dec, 2015 12:28 PM
  • Average Home Prices To Fall In 3 Oil-producing Provinces Next Year: CREA
OTTAWA — The Canadian Real Estate Association expects average house prices in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador to fall next year because of the downturn in the oil industry.
 
The association is estimating Alberta's average housing price will fall in 2016 by 2.5 percent.
 
House prices in Saskatchewan are expected to decline by 1.2 per cent and by one per cent in Newfoundland and Labrador.
 
Canada's national average house price, however, is expected to edge higher by 1.4 per cent in the year ahead, to $448,700 — with Ontario leading the other regions with an increase of 2.9 per cent.
 
CREA says that low interest rates will boost sales but that recently announced federal reforms to mortgage lending rules will have a negative effect beyond the intended targets in the Vancouver and Toronto areas — Canada's most expensive markets.
 
"Minimum down payments will be going up for homes that sell for more than half a million dollars, so larger more expensive housing markets will be affected most," said CREA chief economist Gregory Klump.
 
"Unfortunately, the regulatory changes will also cause unintended collateral damage to housing markets beyond Toronto and Vancouver, including places that are facing economic headwinds from the collapse in oil prices."
 
It says sales activity in Calgary's housing market — which has been struggling to cope with the drop in oil prices to the lowest levels since early 2009 — will be one of the markets affected by the higher minimum down payments for properties above $500,000.
 
The association's 2016 forecast and a revised estimate for this year were released Tuesday with its regular monthly report on activity by member real estate boards across the country.
 
It says that sales activity was up 1.8 per cent nationally between October and November, although half the markets covered posted declines. As usual, the Lower Mainland area of British Columbia and the Greater Toronto Area in Ontario showed the biggest month-month gains.
 
Compared with statistics a year earlier, November's sales activity was up 10.9 per cent with gains in two-thirds of local markets — with Calgary among those to see a decline from what had been historically high levels in November 2014.
 
 
The national average sale price was up 10.2 per cent to $456,186. Exluding the Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto areas, the national average price would have been $338,969 in November, up 3.4 per cent from a year earlier.
 
The association's MLS home price index was up 7.11 per cent, the largest gain in more than five years.
 
CREA has revised its 2015 full-year estimates upwards since its September forecast, largely because of the strength of British Columbia and Ontario. The association is now expecting Canada will have the second-highest sales activity on record this year, with an increase of five per cent to 504,000 units this year.
 
Partially offsetting increases in most provinces, it estimates Alberta will see a 21.4 per cent decline this year. Saskatchewan is also facing a 10.8 per cent decline in transactions compared with 2014, and Nova Scotia will see a 5.1 per cent decline, according to CREA's estimates.
 
 
B.C. is expected to have the biggest regional increase, with a 21.4 per cent jump from 2014's sales levels. Ontario home sales are projected to be 9.3 per cent higher in 2015 than last year, but that figure would likely have been higher but for a shortage of low-rise homes around the Greater Toronto Area.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Teenager, Toronto Engineer Honoured For Their Civic Engagement

Vancouver Teenager, Toronto Engineer Honoured For Their Civic Engagement
Hana Woldeyes says she can't fathom what pain Syrian refugees faced as they fled their country, but she's got an inkling of what the teenagers will go through as they try to settle into a new one.

Vancouver Teenager, Toronto Engineer Honoured For Their Civic Engagement

Supreme Court Rules That Class-action Lawsuit Against CIBC Can Proceed To Trial

Supreme Court Rules That Class-action Lawsuit Against CIBC Can Proceed To Trial
TORONTO — The Supreme Court of Canada has dismissed an appeal by CIBC, allowing a class-action lawsuit brought by shareholders against the bank to proceed to trial.

Supreme Court Rules That Class-action Lawsuit Against CIBC Can Proceed To Trial

Opening Of Canadian Parliament Reflects The Brutality Of Some Age-old Traditions

Opening Of Canadian Parliament Reflects The Brutality Of Some Age-old Traditions
OTTAWA — The opening of Parliament is ripe with traditions and symbolism that reach back in time to the beginnings of parliamentary democracy.

Opening Of Canadian Parliament Reflects The Brutality Of Some Age-old Traditions

Disappointing Economic Figures Fuel Views That Canada Will Stumble Out Of 2015

Disappointing Economic Figures Fuel Views That Canada Will Stumble Out Of 2015
OTTAWA — Fresh bundles of disappointing data rolled out Friday are backing up expectations the Canadian economy is poised to close out the year with a whimper.

Disappointing Economic Figures Fuel Views That Canada Will Stumble Out Of 2015

Nova Scotia Medical Residents Ratify Contract Agreement

Meanwhile, the Nova Scotia Government and General Employees Union says it has put a contract ratification vote on hold until mid-January for 7,600 civil servants.

Nova Scotia Medical Residents Ratify Contract Agreement

Mountie Shot On The Job Considering Return To Work One Year Into Recovery

Mountie Shot On The Job Considering Return To Work One Year Into Recovery
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — The RCMP detachment in Kamloops, B.C., has celebrated a milestone in the recovery of one its own a year after the officer was shot during a traffic stop.

Mountie Shot On The Job Considering Return To Work One Year Into Recovery