Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lack Of Homes On The Market To Drive Toronto Real Estate Prices, Realtors Say

The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2017 12:17 PM
    TORONTO — A lack of homes for sale is expected to drive Toronto's sizzling housing market to another year of double-digit price increases, the city's real estate board said Tuesday.
     
    The Toronto Real Estate Board said the average price for all types of housing is forecast to rise to about $825,000 — up from $730,472 in December and $729,922 for the 2016 calendar year.
     
    The largest year-over-year price increases will be for low-rise types of housing such as detached and semi-detached homes and townhouses, said the board, which represents about 46,000 real estate brokers and salespersons.
     
    "While changes to federal mortgage lending guidelines and higher borrowing costs may impact some would-be homebuyers, the big impediment will be the lack of inventory," Jason Mercer, the board's director of market analysis, said in a statement.
     
    The number of listings at the end of December were at their lowest since before 2000, Mercer said.
     
    "It is unlikely that the shortage of listings will improve to any great degree over the course of the next year," he said. "This will put a ceiling on sales growth."
     
     
    The board estimates there will be between 104,500 and 115,500 home sales this year through its MLS system — more or less similar to the 113,133 recorded last year.
     
    The group is repeating its call for the private, public and not-for-profit sectors to seek solutions to increase the supply of properties for sale in the Toronto region rather than attempt to reduce demand from would-be buyers.
     
    It said a foreign buyers' tax, which some called for to rein in Toronto house prices after such a levy was implemented in Vancouver, would be misguided. It pointed to a survey it conducted among its members late last year that concluded 4.9 per cent of transactions in the Greater Toronto Area involved foreigners.
     
    After a tax on foreign nationals buying property in Vancouver was introduced in August, the city saw a whopping drop in the number of homes sold — in some cases, monthly sales fell between 30 to nearly 40 per cent on a year-over-year basis.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    RCMP Instructor Charged With Assault At Regina Airport, Remains At Work

    RCMP Instructor Charged With Assault At Regina Airport, Remains At Work
    REGINA — An instructor at the RCMP's training depot in Regina has been charged with assault for allegedly punching a man through the window of a vehicle.

    RCMP Instructor Charged With Assault At Regina Airport, Remains At Work

    Help Surrey Police Identify Suspect In Attempted ATM Robbery In Newton

    Help Surrey Police Identify Suspect In Attempted ATM Robbery In Newton
    Surrey RCMP is asking for the public’s assistance in identifying a male suspect in an attempted ATM robbery in Newton.

    Help Surrey Police Identify Suspect In Attempted ATM Robbery In Newton

    14-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide After Parents Refuse To Buy Him Smartphone

    14-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide After Parents Refuse To Buy Him Smartphone
    Apparently upset with his parents for denying him a smartphone, a 14-year-old boy allegedly committed suicide in neighbouring Jagtial district, police said on Wednesday.

    14-Year-Old Boy Commits Suicide After Parents Refuse To Buy Him Smartphone

    Baby On Board: Couple Allegedly Dealing Drugs From Car With Baby In Back Seat

    Police say a couple of alleged drug dealers had a baby with them as they sold fentanyl in a city east of Toronto.

    Baby On Board: Couple Allegedly Dealing Drugs From Car With Baby In Back Seat

    Quebec Woman Arrested In Bahamas For Allegedly Having Sex With Minor

    Quebec Woman Arrested In Bahamas For Allegedly Having Sex With Minor
    A Quebec mother of three is under arrest in the Bahamas for allegedly having sex with a teenage boy.

    Quebec Woman Arrested In Bahamas For Allegedly Having Sex With Minor

    Family Of Four 'Brazen' Cougars Put Down After Getting Too Bold In B.C.

    PENTICTON, B.C. — British Columbia conservation officers have killed a family of four cougars they say were growing increasingly bold while hunting urban deer around homes in the province's Interior.

    Family Of Four 'Brazen' Cougars Put Down After Getting Too Bold In B.C.