Close X
Saturday, October 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Home Sales In Vancouver Dropped 5.6 Per Cent Last Year, Real Estate Board Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Jan, 2017 10:39 AM
    VANCOUVER — Home sales in Metro Vancouver dropped by 5.6 per cent in 2016, the city's real estate board said Wednesday, wrapping up a tumultuous year in one of the country's most watched housing markets.
     
    The composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver, as measured by the Multiple Listing Service home price index, hit $897,600 in December. That's a 17.8 per cent increase from the same month the previous year.
     
     
    "It was an eventful year for real estate in Metro Vancouver," board president Dan Morrison said in a statement.
     
    "Escalating prices caused by low supply and strong homebuyer demand brought more attention to the market than ever before."
     
    Residential property sales in the city started the year off strong, sometimes hitting record highs. But partway through the year the market started to cool, with sales and eventually prices declining.
     
    That came as a number of measures were implemented in an effort to address home affordability concerns in Vancouver, including a 15 per cent tax for foreign buyers and a tax on homes left vacant.
     
     
    "As prices rose in the first half of the year, public debate waged about what was fuelling demand and what should be done to stop it," Morrison said.
     
    "This led to multiple government interventions into the market. The long-term effects of these actions won't be fully understood for some time."
     
    There were 39,943 detached, attached and apartment properties sold in the region last year, down from the 42,326 sales recorded in 2015.
     
    Despite the decline in the number of homes sold, 2016 was the third-highest selling year on record, behind only 2015 and 2005.
     
    Last month, residential property sales totalled 1,714, a 39.4 per cent decrease from the 2,827 homes sold in December 2015.
    ++

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Harjit Sajjan Says Canada To Host Peacekeeping Summit Next Year

    Harjit Sajjan Says Canada To Host Peacekeeping Summit Next Year
    OTTAWA — Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan says Canada will host a peacekeeping summit next year, even as Conservative MPs accuse the government of playing politics with Canadian troops.

    Harjit Sajjan Says Canada To Host Peacekeeping Summit Next Year

    Passenger Rights Advocate Wins Appeal Of Complaint Affecting Large Travellers

    Passenger Rights Advocate Wins Appeal Of Complaint Affecting Large Travellers
    HALIFAX — A passenger rights advocate has won an appeal against the Canadian Transportation Agency to review an airline practice he said discriminates against overweight travellers.

    Passenger Rights Advocate Wins Appeal Of Complaint Affecting Large Travellers

    Edmonton Man Facing Several Charges After Disturbance On WestJet Flight

    EDMONTON — RCMP have laid charges against a 20-year-old man after a disturbance on a WestJet flight from Toronto to Edmonton.

    Edmonton Man Facing Several Charges After Disturbance On WestJet Flight

    Quebec Taxi Lobby Furious With Uber Deal; Considering Legal Action, Protests

    Quebec Taxi Lobby Furious With Uber Deal; Considering Legal Action, Protests
    MONTREAL — Quebec's taxi lobby is furious at the news of a deal between the provincial government and Uber.

    Quebec Taxi Lobby Furious With Uber Deal; Considering Legal Action, Protests

    Kids Help Phone Study Suggests One In Five Teens Has Considered Suicide

    Kids Help Phone Study Suggests One In Five Teens Has Considered Suicide
    TORONTO — A new study suggests that one in five Canadian teens has seriously considered attempting suicide in the previous year.

    Kids Help Phone Study Suggests One In Five Teens Has Considered Suicide

    Avowed Atheist Minister Should Be Defrocked, United Church Panel Urges

    Avowed Atheist Minister Should Be Defrocked, United Church Panel Urges
    TORONTO — An unabashedly atheist minister who does not believe in the Bible should be defrocked for her beliefs, a United Church committee has recommended in a split decision that seems likely to stir further dissent in the church.

    Avowed Atheist Minister Should Be Defrocked, United Church Panel Urges