Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Real Estate Board Reports Metro Vancouver Home Sales Down Sharply

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Oct, 2018 01:40 PM
    VANCOUVER — The Greater Vancouver Real Estate Board says home sales across the region in September plunged more than 40 per compared with the same month last year.
     
     
    Statistics from the board show 1,595 homes changed hands in Metro Vancouver last month, a 43.5 per cent drop from the 2,821 sales recorded in September 2017.
     
     
    The board says the result for last month also marked a 17.3 per cent decline when compared with sales in August.
     
     
    September sales in Metro Vancouver were also 36 per cent below the 10-year sales average for the month.
     
     
    A news release from the real estate board says more homes were listed across Metro Vancouver in September while demand remained below typical levels for this time of year.
     
     
    Board president-elect Ashley Smith says listings are accumulating as sales slow, easing prices just over two per cent since September of last year, while the composite benchmark price for residential properties has tumbled 3.1 per cent over the last three months. 
     
     
    "There's more selection for home buyers to choose from today. Since spring, home listing totals have risen to levels we haven't seen in our market in four years," Smith says in the release.
     
     
    "Metro Vancouver's housing market has changed pace compared to the last few years. Our townhome and apartment markets are sitting in balanced market territory and our detached home market remains in a clear buyers' market."
     
     
    The total number of properties listed for sale in Metro Vancouver was 13,084, a 38.2 per cent increase compared with September 2017 and a 10.7 per cent increase since August, the board says.
     
     
    The benchmark price for a detached home was $1,540,900, a 4.5 per cent decrease from September 2017 and a 3.4 per cent skid over the last three months.
     
     
    The benchmark price of a condominium apartment property was $687,300, marking a 7.4 per cent increase over the last year but a 3.1 per cent slide in three months.
     
     
    Townhomes across the region had a benchmark price of $837,600 which the real estate board says is a 6.4 per cent increase since last September but a two per cent decline in three months.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Damage Control Needed On Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney's India Trip: Trade Minister

    Damage Control Needed On Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney's India Trip: Trade Minister
    The Alberta government says it will be doing "damage control" after Opposition leader Jason Kenney's visit to India.

    Damage Control Needed On Alberta Opposition Leader Jason Kenney's India Trip: Trade Minister

    Toronto Company Offers Cash To 'Cannabis Connoisseurs' To Smoke Marijuana

    Toronto Company Offers Cash To 'Cannabis Connoisseurs' To Smoke Marijuana
     A cannabis firm is looking to hire five pot aficionados from across the country to sample the company’s wares and get paid to do it.

    Toronto Company Offers Cash To 'Cannabis Connoisseurs' To Smoke Marijuana

    WATCH: Dash Cam Video Shows Frightening Near-Miss On Newfoundland Highway

    WATCH: Dash Cam Video Shows Frightening Near-Miss On Newfoundland Highway
    A dash cam video showing a frightening near-miss on Newfoundland's west coast is getting a lot of views online.

    WATCH: Dash Cam Video Shows Frightening Near-Miss On Newfoundland Highway

    B.C. Invests In French Teacher Education Seats, Recruitment, Retention

    B.C. Invests In French Teacher Education Seats, Recruitment, Retention
    BURNABY, B.C. — The British Columbia government wants to double the number of French teachers available for the 2019-20 school year.

    B.C. Invests In French Teacher Education Seats, Recruitment, Retention

    'Hurt, Anger, Displeasure': Liberals Blindsided By MP Leona Alleslev's Defection

    'Hurt, Anger, Displeasure': Liberals Blindsided By MP Leona Alleslev's Defection
    OTTAWA — Clayton Haluza was sitting at his desk on Bay Street when he learned the Liberal MP he spent countless hours campaigning for had defected — a choice leaving him, and his party, blindsided a year out from an election.

    'Hurt, Anger, Displeasure': Liberals Blindsided By MP Leona Alleslev's Defection

    'Minor' Ammonia Leak Prompts Closure Of Coquitlam, B.C., Recreation Centre

    'Minor' Ammonia Leak Prompts Closure Of Coquitlam, B.C., Recreation Centre
    COQUITLAM, B.C. — A recreation centre in Coquitlam, B.C., was temporarily closed Monday due to a "minor" ammonia leak.

    'Minor' Ammonia Leak Prompts Closure Of Coquitlam, B.C., Recreation Centre