Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Property Data Show Sharp Decline In Foreign Investment After Tax

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2017 03:08 PM
    VICTORIA — Government data released Friday show a steep drop in real estate transactions in the Vancouver area after British Columbia introduced a tax for foreign buyers last summer.
     
    Tax revenues from property transfers in Metro Vancouver indicate there were almost 15,000 transactions in a about a seven-week period ending Aug. 1, but the number declined to a low of about 4,700 in October.
     
    The 15-per-cent tax went into effect on Aug. 2.
     
    The number of foreign buyers fell from about 1,970 in the period ending Aug. 1, to 60 in the rest of August.
     
    In November, about 200 property transfers involved foreigners.
     
    The data show that in the four months after the tax was introduced, there was more consistency in sales between Metro Vancouver and the rest of B.C. for transactions involving foreign buyers, the Finance Ministry said in a statement.
     
    Data for November showed 204 property transfers in Metro Vancouver involving foreign nationals, or about 3.2 per cent of the total transactions. Outside of the Vancouver area, there were 350 property transfers involving foreigners, or about 4.1 per cent.
     
    "It's still too early to draw any real conclusions from the data about the long-term effect of the additional property transfer tax," the statement said. "The purpose of the additional property transfer tax is to help manage demand in Metro Vancouver's residential real estate market, to allow the housing market to respond by building new homes to meet local needs."
     
    The data also suggested a slight rebound in the total number of properties that were transferred in November, when 5,000 transactions were recorded.
     
    More than $14 billion worth of property was transferred in Vancouver during the period before Aug. 1, and the figure fell to about $3.7 billion in October.
     
    Across the province, the data showed the value of property transfers involving foreign buyers hit $2.6 billion in the period before the tax was introduced, dipping to $296 million last November.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Woman In Her 90s Found Dead In House Fire Early Christmas Eve In Toronto's East End, Firefighters Sa

    Woman In Her 90s Found Dead In House Fire Early Christmas Eve In Toronto's East End, Firefighters Sa
    Toronto's interim fire chief says a woman in her 90s died in a house fire early Christmas Eve.

    Woman In Her 90s Found Dead In House Fire Early Christmas Eve In Toronto's East End, Firefighters Sa

    Pantless Calgary Man Arrested At Orlando Airport After Joyride In Stolen Luggage Vehicle

    Pantless Calgary Man Arrested At Orlando Airport After Joyride In Stolen Luggage Vehicle
    ORLANDO, Fla. — A Canadian man is being held on $5,100 bond in Florida after driving a baggage-towing vehicle across the tarmac at Orlando International Airport.

    Pantless Calgary Man Arrested At Orlando Airport After Joyride In Stolen Luggage Vehicle

    Police Warn Of High-quality Fake Gold Bars Being Shopped Around In Winnipeg

    Police Warn Of High-quality Fake Gold Bars Being Shopped Around In Winnipeg
    Winnipeg police are warning that there are some high-quality counterfeit gold bars being shopped around.

    Police Warn Of High-quality Fake Gold Bars Being Shopped Around In Winnipeg

    Calgary Man Who Tied Lawn Chair To 120 Balloons, Flew Over Stampede, Facing Hefty Fine

    Calgary Man Who Tied Lawn Chair To 120 Balloons, Flew Over Stampede, Facing Hefty Fine
    CALGARY — A Calgary man is facing a hefty fine for strapping 120 helium balloons to a lawn chair and soaring high into the air above the Stampede grounds in 2015.

    Calgary Man Who Tied Lawn Chair To 120 Balloons, Flew Over Stampede, Facing Hefty Fine

    B.C. Veterinarian Saves Puppy With Opioid-Reversing Naloxone

    B.C. Veterinarian Saves Puppy With Opioid-Reversing Naloxone
    SAANICH, B.C. — A Victoria-area veterinarian who used naloxone to revive a puppy that ate some sort of opioid said she fears word of the successful treatment could put her clinic at risk.

    B.C. Veterinarian Saves Puppy With Opioid-Reversing Naloxone

    Home Ownership Costs Remain Sky High In Vancouver

    Home Ownership Costs Remain Sky High In Vancouver
    TORONTO — The latest report on housing trends and affordability from RBC Economics Research says owning a home in Canada is less affordable now than at any time in nearly eight years.

    Home Ownership Costs Remain Sky High In Vancouver