Close X
Sunday, September 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

'Troubling Trend' As Toronto Real Estate Market Sees Record Sales For July

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Aug, 2016 11:58 AM
    Toronto's scorching real estate market had another hot month in July, with sales hitting a new monthly record and prices continuing to soar, according to the most recent data from the Toronto Real Estate Board.
     
    TREB says the average resale price of a home in the Greater Toronto Area climbed to $709,825 last month, up more than 16 per cent compared to a year ago.
     
    The average price of a detached home soared even higher, up a whopping 21 per cent from July 2015 to $952,983, while the average price of a condo rose 9.2 per cent to $406,865.
     
    Sales of homes also increased, with 9,989 dwellings changing hands in the Greater Toronto Area last month — the highest number ever recorded in July.
     
    That's compared to 9,813 in July of last year.
     
    Meanwhile, the number of new listings shrank roughly seven per cent to 13,542 last month compared to a year ago, reflecting what the real estate board calls a "troubling trend" as demand outpaces supply in the Toronto area.
     
    The sales data comes as experts caution that a new 15 per cent tax aimed at foreign investors in Vancouver's real estate market could end up further driving up house prices in Toronto.
     
    The B.C. government has introduced the tax, which took effect Tuesday, on foreign nationals who purchase properties in Metro Vancouver in the hopes of improving housing affordability.
     
    Some realtors have voiced concerns that investors looking to dodge the tax could park their money in other areas of the country, particularly Toronto where prices are already sky-high.
     
    "Housing policy is now top of mind for all levels of government," TREB president Larry Cerqua said in a statement Thursday.
     
    "Policy makers need to be focusing on solutions to the sustained lack of low-rise inventory throughout the GTA."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Food Chain Changes May Be Luring Humpbacks To B.C.'s South Coast: Researchers

    Food Chain Changes May Be Luring Humpbacks To B.C.'s South Coast: Researchers
    VANCOUVER — Whale watching companies in the Salish Sea report unusually large groups of humpback whales are becoming a frequent sight off B.C.'s south coast.

    Food Chain Changes May Be Luring Humpbacks To B.C.'s South Coast: Researchers

    Coast Guard Crew Honoured For 'Nick Of Time' Heroics That Prevented Catastrophe

    HALIFAX — It was their last hope of preventing a potential environmental disaster.

    Coast Guard Crew Honoured For 'Nick Of Time' Heroics That Prevented Catastrophe

    Flooding Improves In Saskatchewan; 5 Communities Under States Of Emergency

    Flooding Improves In Saskatchewan; 5 Communities Under States Of Emergency
    REGINA — Emergency management officials in Saskatchewan say things are improving following widespread, heavy rain that brought flooding to several parts of the province.

    Flooding Improves In Saskatchewan; 5 Communities Under States Of Emergency

    Cherry Takes Aim At 'Left-Wing Weirdos' In Critique Of The Tenors' 'O Canada'

    Cherry Takes Aim At 'Left-Wing Weirdos' In Critique Of The Tenors' 'O Canada'
    Members of The Tenors quickly distanced themselves from a rogue Tenor on Tuesday night after a member of the classical-pop group inserted a political statement into the lyrics of O Canada before the Major League Baseball all-star game in San Diego.

    Cherry Takes Aim At 'Left-Wing Weirdos' In Critique Of The Tenors' 'O Canada'

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened
    TORONTO — Ontario spent more than $44 million preparing for a correctional and probation workers' strike that never happened, The Canadian Press has learned.

    Ontario Spent $44m To Prepare For Jail Strike That Never Happened

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy
    CALGARY — A decision by Earls Restaurants Ltd. to eliminate tipping at a downtown Calgary restaurant and replace it with a mandatory 16 per cent "hospitality charge" is stirring controversy.

    What's The Beef? Mandatory Tip At Earls Restaurant In Calgary Stirs Controversy