Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver Home Sales Slide Nearly 26% Last Month, Condo And Townhouse Demand Rise

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 May, 2017 12:04 PM
    VANCOUVER — The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says the number of home sales slid last month by nearly 26 per cent year-over-year while prices continued to climb.
     
    Residential property sales in Metro Vancouver totalled 3,553 last month, a 25.7 per cent decline compared to a year ago.
     
    Sales of detached homes fell 38.8 per cent from April 2016, while the composite benchmark price for those properties rose 8.1 per cent in that time, reaching $1,516,500.
     
    The composite benchmark price for all homes was $941,100, 11.4 per cent higher than April 2016.
     
    Vancouver's real estate market remains the most expensive in Canada, though Toronto is catching up, with prices rising at rates that have alarmed governments at various levels.
     
    Last August, the B.C. government implemented a 15 per cent tax on foreigners purchasing properties in Metro Vancouver in a bid to cool down the city's housing market.
     
     
    For the first four months of the year, Multiple Listing Service data in Metro Vancouver show that condominium and townhome sales now make up a larger percentage of all residential transactions, accounting for 68.5 per cent, on average. That's up 10 per cent from 58.2 per cent over the same period last year.
     
    The total number of properties listed for sale on the MLS in Metro Vancouver increased 3.5 per cent in April compared to a year ago, the board said.
     
    "Our overall market is operating below the record-setting pace from a year ago and is in line with historical spring levels. It's a different story in our condominium and townhome markets," Jill Oudil, president of the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver, said Tuesday in a statement.
     
     
    "Demand has been increasing for months and supply is not keeping pace. This dynamic is causing prices to increase and making multiple offer scenarios the norm."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vice Reporter Must Turn Over Materials To RCMP, Ontario Top Court Rules

    Vice Reporter Must Turn Over Materials To RCMP, Ontario Top Court Rules
    TORONTO — A Vice Media reporter must give the RCMP the background materials he used for stories on an accused terrorist, Ontario's top court affirmed Wednesday.

    Vice Reporter Must Turn Over Materials To RCMP, Ontario Top Court Rules

    Tories Take Aim At $127,000 Bill For Trudeau's Trip To Aga Khan's Private Island

    Tories Take Aim At $127,000 Bill For Trudeau's Trip To Aga Khan's Private Island
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau's family vacation over New Year's is back in the spotlight after documents tabled in Parliament revealed the cost of the trip down south was north of $127,000.

    Tories Take Aim At $127,000 Bill For Trudeau's Trip To Aga Khan's Private Island

    Halifax Police To Hold Its First-Ever Voluntary Surrender Day

    The police force plans to hold its first-ever voluntary surrender day April 29 at the Dartmouth North Community Centre.

    Halifax Police To Hold Its First-Ever Voluntary Surrender Day

    Man Wanted In Stepson's Death Fled 2,000 Kilometres Before Arrest, Police Say

    Man Wanted In Stepson's Death Fled 2,000 Kilometres Before Arrest, Police Say
    Niagara regional police say Justin Kuijer was arrested Tuesday night in Kenora, Ont., four days after allegedly fleeing his home in St. Catharines, Ont.

    Man Wanted In Stepson's Death Fled 2,000 Kilometres Before Arrest, Police Say

    Man Who Sought Refuge In B.C. Church Continues Fight To Clear His Name

    Man Who Sought Refuge In B.C. Church Continues Fight To Clear His Name
    Jose Figueroa, who is studying law at the University of Victoria, said Tuesday he'll be in court this week appealing a decision last year that dismissed his request for a certificate from the foreign affairs minister stating he is not on a terrorist list.

    Man Who Sought Refuge In B.C. Church Continues Fight To Clear His Name

    Officer Who Shot Man In Surrey, B.C. Grocery Store Says He Lunged At Her Partner

    Officer Who Shot Man In Surrey, B.C. Grocery Store Says He Lunged At Her Partner
     A young man who was stabbing himself in the stomach at a grocery store in Surrey, B.C., lunged at transit police officers with knives in both hands before he was shot,

    Officer Who Shot Man In Surrey, B.C. Grocery Store Says He Lunged At Her Partner