Close X
Monday, September 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sales Of Homes In December Up 10 Per Cent From Same Month Last Year

The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2016 01:27 PM
  • Sales Of Homes In December Up 10 Per Cent From Same Month Last Year
OTTAWA — Sales of existing homes rose 10 per cent in December compared to the same month the previous year, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Friday.
 
The national average price for a home sold last month was $454,342, up 12.0 per cent from a year ago, boosted by gains in the Vancouver and Toronto regions.
 
Excluding Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto, the average price was $336,994, up 5.4 per cent from a year ago.
 
Sal Guatieri, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, says that with the possibility of a further interest rate cut from the Bank of Canada on the horizon, the red-hot real estate markets in Vancouver and Toronto are unlikely to see a significant pullback.
 
However, price gains in those markets could be "less frothy," Guatieri said in a note to clients.
 
"The pain in the oil-producing regions will persist, if not intensify, until oil prices show a pulse," he added.
 
TD economist Diana Petramala said home sales could spike in January as buyers look to pre-empt changes from Ottawa requiring higher down payments for homes worth between $500,000 and $1 million, which will take effect in mid-February.
 
Compared to the previous month, homes sales slipped in December by 0.6 per cent, the Canadian Real Estate Association said. Sales were down in Calgary and Edmonton as well as York Region and Hamilton-Burlington in Ontario.

MORE National ARTICLES

Game 3 Of ALCS In Toronto Goes Head-To-Head With Federal Election

While the Blue Jays are hosting Kansas City on Monday night, voters will be casting their ballots in the federal election.

Game 3 Of ALCS In Toronto Goes Head-To-Head With Federal Election

Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec

Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec
The weekly West Island Chronicle and the Westmount Examiner will cease publication Wednesday, with the loss of three jobs.

Transcontinental Closing Its Last Two English-Language Newspapers In Quebec

Post's Andrew Coyne In Public Disagreement With Paper's Endorsement Of Conservatives

Post's Andrew Coyne In Public Disagreement With Paper's Endorsement Of Conservatives
Political journalist Andrew Coyne says he has resigned as editor of editorials and comment for the National Post in a "professional disagreement" with the newspaper.

Post's Andrew Coyne In Public Disagreement With Paper's Endorsement Of Conservatives

Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends

Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends
All that remains for exhausted party workers is to get out the vote in what appears to be an epic battle fought over gut-level values as much as election platforms.

Parties Try To Get Out The Vote As Longest Modern-Day Federal Campaign Ends

Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident

Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident
Hundreds of people crowded into the Withrow Gospel Mission, west of Red Deer, on Sunday to honour the memories of Catie Bott, who was 13, and her twin 11-year-old siblings, Jana and Dara Bott.

Grieving Alberta Community Remembers Sisters Killed In Farm Accident

Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous

Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous
According to a new British survey done by smartphone maker HTC, almost everybody lies on their Facebook and Instagram profiles to look good.

Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous