Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadian Home Sales Rise By 0.9 Per Cent Between July And August

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2018 12:54 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada's housing market rebound appears to be slowing amid diminishing increases in national home sales, says the Canadian Real Estate Association.
     
     
    The organization said on Monday that home sales saw their fourth consecutive increase in August, rising 0.9 per cent month-over-month to 39,366 from 39,028 and coming as roughly half of all local markets saw a month-over-month uptick.
     
     
    However, August home sales simultaneously experienced a 3.8 per cent non-seasonally-adjusted year-over-year drop.
     
     
    CREA attributed the drop to "major declines" in British Columbia real estate and stricter mortgage regulations that came into effect at the start of the year.
     
    “Improving national home sales activity in recent months continues to obscure significant differences in regional trends for home sales and prices,” said Gregory Klump, CREA’s chief economist. “Moreover, recent monthly sales increases are diminishing, which suggests the recent rebound may be starting to lose steam.”
     
     
    Economists said the slowdown signals a shift away from the "wild swings" the real estate market saw in recent years as prices and demand for homes skyrocketed, often causing a frenzied pace for sales.
     
     
    TD Economics economist Rishi Sondhi said, "While one month of data hardly makes a trend, August's performance could be a sign that the worst is over for the province.
     
     
    Meanwhile, BMO Capital Markets chief economist Douglas Porter called the housing market "a bit of a yawner, neither drastically hot nor desperately cold" in his note to investors.
     
     
    "The outward calm masks some still-serious regional shifts beneath the placid surface," he said, noting that measures aimed at cooling the B.C. market have resulted in some of the biggest sales declines in the country.
     
     
    The Greater Vancouver Area saw a 36.7 per cent year-over-year non-seasonally-adjusted decrease in sales activity, while Fraser Valley and Victoria saw 39.5 per cent and 17.6 per cent drops respectively, according to CREA.
     
     
    The Greater Toronto Area was faring better and continuing to stabilize, Porter said.
     
     
    GTA home sales rose 7.6 per cent year-over-year to 6,839 in August from 6,357 the year before. The region also saw a 2.2 per cent increase in homes sold month-over-month.
     
     
    "Toronto is very close to having a 'normal' market at this point," said Porter. "Policymakers could not have asked for a better outcome, achieving the proverbial soft landing — at least so far."
     
     
    The conditions caused CREA to forecast that 462,900 homes will be sold in the country this year, a 9.8 per cent drop from last year's forecast of 513,280 homes. Looking ahead to 2019, CREA said it expects to see 472,700 homes change hands.
     
     
    CREA also noted that between July and August the number of newly-listed homes was unchanged, hovering around 69,000.
     
     
    It said the slight uptick in sales and the lack of new home listings pushed the Multiple Listing Service home price index up 2.5 per cent year-over-year.
     
     
    The disparity between the two numbers also caused the sales-to-new listings ratio to increase to 56.6 per cent in August from 56.2 per cent the month before.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    The Of Man Who Fell From B.C. Houseboat Found In Washington State

    The Of Man Who Fell From B.C. Houseboat Found In Washington State
    The body of a man who fell off a houseboat in Delta, B.C., in April has been found on a beach in Washington state.

    The Of Man Who Fell From B.C. Houseboat Found In Washington State

    Guest Column: Racism, Hate, Crime, Violence Has Increased Exponentially In Canada

    Guest Column: Racism, Hate, Crime, Violence Has Increased Exponentially In Canada
    An Indian-origin couple in Canada’s Hamilton city were subjected to racist abuse by a man on Saturday, in the parking lot of the Walmart Super center in the city. Dale Robertson, 47, told the couple to go back to their country and threatened to kill their children

    Guest Column: Racism, Hate, Crime, Violence Has Increased Exponentially In Canada

    Veterinarian Warns Dog Owners On Cannabis Risks, Saying Cases Come In Weekly

    Veterinarian Warns Dog Owners On Cannabis Risks, Saying Cases Come In Weekly
     A veterinarian is warning dog owners to be careful with cannabis, saying her clinic is treating about one dog per week for marijuana toxicity.

    Veterinarian Warns Dog Owners On Cannabis Risks, Saying Cases Come In Weekly

    Harassment Complaint Made Against University Women's Hockey Coach In Alberta

    Harassment Complaint Made Against University Women's Hockey Coach In Alberta
     The head coach of the University of Lethbridge women's hockey team is to receive more training after the school investigated a formal harassment complaint filed by six of her players.

    Harassment Complaint Made Against University Women's Hockey Coach In Alberta

    Fewer Buyers, More Choice, Push Vancouver Home Sales To Lowest Level Since 2000

    Fewer Buyers, More Choice, Push Vancouver Home Sales To Lowest Level Since 2000
    Home sales in July across Metro Vancouver tumbled to their lowest level in 18 years in statistics compiled by the real estate board, but prices remained steady since last month.

    Fewer Buyers, More Choice, Push Vancouver Home Sales To Lowest Level Since 2000

    B.C. Overdose Deaths Drop In June, More Than 100 Still Dying Each Month

    VANCOUVER — The latest overdose statistics in British Columbia show a dip in the number of suspected illicit drug deaths in June compared with the same month a year earlier, but the death toll remains high overall.

    B.C. Overdose Deaths Drop In June, More Than 100 Still Dying Each Month