Close X
Sunday, September 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toronto, Vancouver Markets Push October Home Sales Higher, CREA Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Nov, 2015 11:38 AM
    OTTAWA — Canadian home sales grew in October as demand remained strong in the red-hot real estate markets in Vancouver and the Greater Toronto Area.
     
    The Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday the number of homes sold through its Multiple Listing Service was up 1.8 per cent in October from the previous month.
     
    However, the gains weren't shared across the country, as the number of markets where sales posted a monthly increase and those where sales fell were evenly split.
     
    Compared with a year ago, sales rose 0.1 per cent.
     
    BMO chief economist Doug Porter said the housing market has split into three groups with Toronto and Vancouver too hot for comfort, the Prairies hit by the sliding price of oil and a middle ground which includes places like Ottawa and Montreal.
     
    Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon and Regina all posted double-digit sales declines in October. Calgary's housing sales are down 36.4 per cent from a year earlier.
     
    "The renewed sag in oil in recent months looks to have triggered a renewed weakening in housing markets across much of Alberta and Saskatchewan," Porter said.
     
    Oil prices have fallen back to around US$45 a barrel after rebounding to around $60 a barrel in June. The price of crude has dropped precipitously from above US$105 last year.
     
    Canadians are still looking to buy detached homes, which remain in short supply in Toronto and Vancouver. There were 5.5 months of national inventory at the end of October, down from 5.7 in September.
     
    That demand has pushed home prices higher despite the availability of condo apartments.
     
    The national average price for homes sold in October was $454,976, up 8.3 per cent on a year-over-year basis, driven by Vancouver and Toronto.
     
    Prices in Greater Vancouver were up 15.33 per cent from a year ago, while Greater Toronto was up 10.33 per cent.
     
     
    Without the Vancouver and Toronto markets, the average was $339,059, up 2.5 per cent from a year ago.
     
    Porter said both markets are too hot for comfort and called the 19.3 per cent year-over-year gain in sales in Vancouver out of this world.
     
    "If anything, October saw an even greater divergence of Vancouver from the rest of the country (and perhaps planet Earth)," he wrote.
     
    The national sales-to-new listings ratio was 57.9 per cent in October. CREA says a sales-to-new listings ratio between 40 and 60 per cent is generally consistent with balanced housing market conditions.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Flawed Science, Lack Of Consultation Cited As Ruling Ends Fracking Water Licence

    Flawed Science, Lack Of Consultation Cited As Ruling Ends Fracking Water Licence
    The Environmental Appeal Board has overturned a water licence granted to an oil and gas company in northeastern British Columbia, ruling the licence was based on bad science and bad faith.

    Flawed Science, Lack Of Consultation Cited As Ruling Ends Fracking Water Licence

    Public Fears Putting Uranium Mining On Same Footing As Shale Gas In Quebec

    Public Fears Putting Uranium Mining On Same Footing As Shale Gas In Quebec
    Fears about radioactive contamination may close the door to uranium mining in Quebec just as public angst shelved shale gas extraction in the province in 2011.

    Public Fears Putting Uranium Mining On Same Footing As Shale Gas In Quebec

    Second Attempted Child Abduction In Vancouver's Stanley Park, Police Arrest Man

    Second Attempted Child Abduction In Vancouver's Stanley Park, Police Arrest Man
    A two-year-old girl was grabbed by a man in Stanley Park's Lost Lagoon area around 2 p.m. on Monday. The girl's father confronted the man, who let go of the girl and ran off.

    Second Attempted Child Abduction In Vancouver's Stanley Park, Police Arrest Man

    Foreign Sailors Paid As $2 Per Hour While Canadian Crews Remain Jobless: Union

    Foreign Sailors Paid As $2 Per Hour While Canadian Crews Remain Jobless: Union
    The Seafarers International Union of Canada is preparing to take the federal government to court over the use of foreign sailors — some of whom are allegedly being paid as little as $2.02 per hour 

    Foreign Sailors Paid As $2 Per Hour While Canadian Crews Remain Jobless: Union

    Conservatives Drop Two Candidates As Campaign Hits Unofficial Milestone

    Conservatives Drop Two Candidates As Campaign Hits Unofficial Milestone
    The Conservatives stumbled as the federal election reached an unofficial milestone on Monday, dropping two candidates from their slate in the important battleground of the Greater Toronto Area after embarrassing videos surfaced

    Conservatives Drop Two Candidates As Campaign Hits Unofficial Milestone

    Shots Fired In New Westminster, Victims Not Co-Operating With Police

    Shots Fired In New Westminster, Victims Not Co-Operating With Police
    Police say in a release that officers were called to Ewen Avenue near Howe Street around 1:30 a.m. Monday.

    Shots Fired In New Westminster, Victims Not Co-Operating With Police