Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Slowing Market Isn't Dragging Down Metro Vancouver Home Prices

The Canadian Press, 05 Jul, 2016 12:04 PM
    VANCOUVER — New figures on housing sales across Metro Vancouver reveal a modest slowdown, but the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says the market is still booming and prices continue to climb.
     
    Residential property sales in Metro Vancouver totalled 4,400 in June, an increase of about 0.5 per cent compared to one year earlier, but a drop of nearly eight per cent since May.
     
    Despite the month-to-month plunge, the real estate board says sales remained well above the 10-year sales average for June, making it one of the hottest on record.
     
    Dan Morrison, president of the real estate board, says more homes have been listed for sale in Greater Vancouver over the last four months than during any other four-month period over the past decade.
     
    But he says the imbalance between supply and demand continues to create a seller's market.
     
     
    Real estate board figures also show the benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver was $917,800 last month, a 32 per cent jump since June 2015.
     
    The benchmark price for detached homes continues to outstrip that mark over the same period, the board says in a news release.
     
    Sales of single homes fell 19 per cent compared to June 2015, but the benchmark price jumped almost 39 per cent over the same period.
     
    Buyers showed more interest in apartments, with sales up about 19 per cent, while prices climbed 25 per cent to $501,100, the real estate board says.
     
    Townhouse sales also moved up seven per cent year-over-year, with prices up 28 per cent from June 2015 to $656,900.
     
     
    Real estate board figures show about 7,800 properties listed for sale on the multiple listing system in Metro Vancouver, a roughly 40 per cent decline compared to June 2015, and a one per cent increase from May.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Restores Funding For Children With Autism Following Backlash

    The backlash from parents was swift and sustained. Hundreds of children had spent two or three years on the IBI wait list, only to be abruptly removed and given an amount of money that would only pay for, at most, a few months of therapy.

    Ontario Restores Funding For Children With Autism Following Backlash

    Harjit Sajjan Announces $12 Million For New Ramps At 5 Wing Goose Bay In Labrador

    Harjit Sajjan Announces $12 Million For New Ramps At 5 Wing Goose Bay In Labrador
    Sajjan says in a statement that the funding for 5 Wing Goose Bay will be used to replace ramps that have reached their life expectancy.

    Harjit Sajjan Announces $12 Million For New Ramps At 5 Wing Goose Bay In Labrador

    Ikea Canada Issues Safety Recall For Wide Range Of Chests Of Drawers

    The Swedish furniture multinational says it will repair or pay a refund for chests of drawers that don't meet North American safety standards.

    Ikea Canada Issues Safety Recall For Wide Range Of Chests Of Drawers

    Aboriginal Canadians Victims Of Crime More Often Than Non-Aboriginals: Statcan

    OTTAWA — A new report from Statistics Canada suggests aboriginal Canadians were nearly three times as likely to experience sexual assault in 2014 as their non-aboriginal counterparts.

    Aboriginal Canadians Victims Of Crime More Often Than Non-Aboriginals: Statcan

    As Fort McMurray Rebuilds, Fire Chief Wants More Wildfire Resilience

    FORT MCMURRAY, Alta. — The man who led the fight against the wildfire that devastated parts of Fort McMurray in May is urging changes to the way homes are rebuilt to avoid similar destruction in the future.

    As Fort McMurray Rebuilds, Fire Chief Wants More Wildfire Resilience

    Rising Debt Of Canada's Provinces, Municipalities Fiscally Unsustainable: Pbo

    Rising Debt Of Canada's Provinces, Municipalities Fiscally Unsustainable: Pbo
    The parliamentary budget office says at the combined net debt of Canada's so-called subnational governments — currently at 32.5 per cent of GDP — is projected to rise to more than 200 per cent over the next 75 years.

    Rising Debt Of Canada's Provinces, Municipalities Fiscally Unsustainable: Pbo