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High-End Homes Sales Up In Toronto, Vancouver, Down In Calgary In 2015: Report

The Canadian Press, 08 Jan, 2016 12:02 PM
  • High-End Homes Sales Up In Toronto, Vancouver, Down In Calgary In 2015: Report
TORONTO — Sales of homes worth $1 million or more heated up in Toronto and Vancouver last year as the low loonie fuelled demand from foreign buyers, a new report released Thursday says.
 
The report from Sotheby's International Realty Canada says 11,112 homes worth $1 million or more were sold in the Greater Toronto Area last year — an increase of 48 per cent over 2014.
 
In Vancouver, 4,578 homes over the $1 million mark were sold in 2015, up 46 per cent from the previous year.
 
The realtor says sales of homes worth more than $4 million grew the most — in Vancouver by 67 per cent, and in Toronto by 71 per cent.
 
But after years of growth, Calgary's high-end housing market declined last year as the downturn in the oilpatch hurt consumer confidence.
 
The Sotheby's report says sales of homes over $1 million fell 41 per cent in Alberta's largest city in 2015 compared with the previous year.
 
Elaine Hung, vice-president of marketing for Sotheby's International Realty Canada, said low interest rates, high levels of immigration and a limited supply of homes heated up the high-end housing markets in Toronto and Vancouver.
 
"We had a lot of buyers who were very eager to enter the market, and they were bidding on a limited number of homes, particularly in premier neighbourhoods," said Hung.
 
In many instances, that resulted in bidding wars, she said.
 
The luxury segment — comprised of homes worth $4 million or more — benefited from all of those factors, as well as weakness in the Canadian dollar.
 
"We did see increased interest from international buyers, so that was definitely a factor," said Hung, referring to the $4-million-plus segment in Toronto and Vancouver.
 
In Montreal, sales of homes worth over $1 million grew by 15 per cent from a year ago.
 
Looking ahead to 2016, Hung predicts more of the same — continued sales growth in Toronto and Vancouver, a further slowdown in Calgary and a balanced market in Montreal.

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