Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Hot Toronto Real Estate Market Gets Even Hotter In May As Prices And Sales Soar

The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2016 12:20 PM
    TORONTO — The Toronto area's real estate market set a record last month, with nearly 13,000 homes sold, despite sky-high prices and new federal mortgage rules targeted at Canada's most expensive housing markets.
     
    The Toronto Real Estate Board said Friday the number of sales last month was up 10.6 per cent from May 2015 and prices were up about 15 per cent. That came one day after its counterpart in Vancouver also reported record-breaking sales for the month.
     
    For a detached house in the city of Toronto, the average price last month was $1.28 million, while the average price for all homes was $782,051, TREB said.
     
    TREB president Mark McLean said a shortage of homes for sale helped drive the rise in prices.
     
    Finance Minister Bill Morneau has increased the minimum down payment for homes over $500,000, a measure aimed specifically at Toronto and Vancouver.
     
    As of February, homebuyers were required to put down 10 per cent on the portion of a home over $500,000. Buyers can still put down five per cent on the first $500,000 of a home purchase.
     
     
    Ottawa has increasingly come under pressure recently from various quarters, including bankers and the OECD, to do more to cool down the soaring housing markets of Toronto and Vancouver. The federal government has said it is monitoring the situation and may respond with further action, if needed.
     
    On Thursday, the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver reported that it its benchmark price for detached properties rose above $1.5 million — up nearly 37 per cent from May 2015.
     
    The Canadian Real Estate Association's national monthly report will be released on June 15, and will likely show big discrepancies between Toronto and Vancouver on one hand and other cities in the country on the other.
     
    CREA previously reported that sales volumes in Vancouver and Toronto were stable in the first two full months since the new federal mortgage rules went into effect in mid-February. But prices continued to climb month-over-month in March and April.
     
    TREB said 12,870 homes of all types were sold in the Greater Toronto Area through its Multiple Listing Service in May. That included 4,638 in the city itself and 8,232 in surrounding areas.
     
     
    In April, TREB's members sold 12,085 properties including 4,248 in the core and 7,837 in other parts of the GTA.
     
    The Toronto-area sales volume is typically more than double Vancouver's, which was 4,769 last month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

    The legislation would, if passed, make it illegal under the Canadian Human Rights Act to prevent someone from getting a job or to discriminate in the workplace on the basis of the gender they identify with or outwardly express.

    Liberals Unveil Plan To Outlaw Transgender Hate Speech, Discrimination

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'
    Intense And Early Start To Wildfires This Year Could Spell A Long And Difficult Season For All Of Canada And Not Just For Alberta

    'Bad Start To Fire Season Doesn't Necessarily Mean Bad Finish'

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37
    The zoo says Kakinga died on the weekend of heart failure.

    Passing Of A Patriarch: Calgary Zoo Gorilla Kakinga Dies At 37

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg
    Halifax professor Henry Cary said historic records set off the hunt for a star-shaped or pentagonal fort that was marked on a 1753 plan of Lunenburg.

    Archeologists Find Fresh Evidence Of Long-sought British Fort In Lunenburg

    Canadian Trucking Industry Struggles To Attract Next Generation Of Drivers

    MONTREAL — After 40 years as a truck driver, Jack Fielding says it's easier to name the places in North America where he hasn't been than the ones he has.

    Canadian Trucking Industry Struggles To Attract Next Generation Of Drivers

    Alberta Government Releases Fire Damage Surveillance App

    A message from Municipal Affairs Minister Danielle Larivee warns that viewing the satellite images may be traumatic, and the number for Alberta’s Mental Health Help Line is included in her news release.

    Alberta Government Releases Fire Damage Surveillance App