Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

CREA: Canadian Home Sales Revive In March; Vancouver, Toronto The Only Hot Spots

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2015 12:18 PM
    OTTAWA — Low mortgage rates helped boost the number of Canadian home sales in March by 4.1 per cent compared with February, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association.
     
    The association said Wednesday sales through its Multiple Listing Service last month were up in nearly two-thirds of the markets it tracks, led by gains in Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton.
     
    However, Calgary and Edmonton came in below the 10-year average for the month.
     
    "Low mortgage interest rates are good news for affordability as we head into the spring home buying season," CREA president Pauline Aunger said in a statement.
     
    "This spring should see buyers coming off the sidelines in places where winter was anything but mild."
     
    The country's big banks and other lenders have been cutting mortgages rates heading into the busy spring real estate season.
     
    Advertised fixed rates for a five-year term have dropped well below the three per cent mark, with some smaller lenders offering rates under 2.5 per cent.
     
    "Never underestimate the power of lower interest rates," TD Bank economist Diana Petramala said Wednesday.
     
    "Due to the drop in mortgage interest rates since January, the Canadian housing market continued to outperform other areas of the economy in the first quarter of 2015."
     
    Petramala added that while the Bank of Canada's rate announcement Wednesday suggested further rate cuts are unlikely, the already low rate environment would likely continue to bolster demand.
     
    However, she cautioned that the full impact of the drop in oil prices has yet to been seen and home sales in Alberta and Saskatchewan would likely be affected.
     
    The health of the Canadian housing market has been closely watched for signs of a bubble. In its monetary policy report on Wednesday, the Bank of Canada noted that Toronto and Vancouver remain the hot markets.
     
    "Despite localized risks, the most likely scenario as the economy gains strength remains a soft landing in the national housing market and a stabilization of debt-to-income ratios," the central bank said.
     
    Compared with a year ago, CREA said home sales were up 9.5 per cent, while the average price was up 9.4 per cent at $439,144. Excluding Vancouver and Toronto, the average price was $332,711, up 2.4 per cent from a year ago.
     
    Meanwhile, the MLS Home Price Index was up 4.95 per cent from a year ago.
     
    CREA noted that the number of newly listed homes rose 1.8 per cent in March compared with February, while the national sales-to-new listings ratio was 53.9 per cent in March, up from 52.7 per cent in February.
     
    The association says a sales-to-new listings ratio between 40 and 60 per cent is generally consistent with balanced housing market conditions.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Commons Committee Report Calls For A Better Strategy To Combat ISIL

    Commons Committee Report Calls For A Better Strategy To Combat ISIL
    OTTAWA — As Canada prepares its next forays in the fight against ISIL, the Conservative-dominated foreign affairs committee is calling on the government to develop a strategy that goes beyond the military campaign.

    Commons Committee Report Calls For A Better Strategy To Combat ISIL

    Corporate Profit Margins At 27-year High Amid Falling Loonie, Labour Costs: CIBC

    Corporate Profit Margins At 27-year High Amid Falling Loonie, Labour Costs: CIBC
    TORONTO — CIBC World Markets says corporate profit margins hit a 27-year high in the fourth quarter and are likely to remain strong despite the recent softening in the economy due to the oil price shock.

    Corporate Profit Margins At 27-year High Amid Falling Loonie, Labour Costs: CIBC

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs
    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Liberal government has introduced an $8.6-billion budget that increases taxes for the wealthy, bumps up the price of fuel, promises to close some courthouses and cut nearly 250 teaching jobs.

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges
    OTTAWA — A federal watchdog says the Access to Information Act should be extended to all branches of government — including the offices that support Parliament and the courts.

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes
    OTTAWA — The Harper government has issued a long-awaited call for tenders to replace Canada's aging fixed-wing search planes, more than a decade after the project was first proposed.

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

    Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting

    Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting
    MONTREAL — The trial for the man charged in Quebec's 2012 election-night shooting has been scheduled to start on his 65th birthday.

    Murder Trial To Start Sept. 8 For Man Charged In 2012 Quebec Election Shooting