Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver home sales up 46% in March, but show signs of slowing due to outbreak

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Apr, 2020 07:08 AM

    VANCOUVER — The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales started off strong in March but tapered as the COVID-19 outbreak intensified.

    It says that despite the slowdown, overall sales for the month were still up 46.1 per cent to 2,524 sales in the month compared to a year earlier, when March sales had hit their lowest level in more than three decades.

    The board says sales for March were still 19.9 per cent below the 10-year average for the month as restrictions and concerns around the outbreak put pressure on activity.

    Sales averaged 138 per day for the first 10 days of the month, but were down to an average of 93 a day for the last ten days, while the board notes that many sales recorded in the month were already in process before the province declared a state of emergency.

    New listings were down 10.4 per cent from the same month last year to 4,436, but up 10.8 per cent from February.

    The composite benchmark price was $1.03 million, up 2.1 per cent in March compared with last year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Charged In Stabbing Of Woman And Police Officer In Delta Pleads Guilty

    The man who was charged in relation to the February 20, 2019 stabbing incident at Immaculate Conception School today appeared in court Feb. 24, 2020, to plead guilty to three serious charges.

    Man Charged In Stabbing Of Woman And Police Officer In Delta Pleads Guilty

    New Westminster Police Looking For High Risk Missing Person NIRLA SHARMA

    New Westminster Police Department is seeking the public’s assistance in locating 44-year-old New Westminster resident Nirla Sharma.  

    New Westminster Police Looking For High Risk Missing Person NIRLA SHARMA

    Surrey City Council Amends Bylaws to Support Fair Competition Between Taxi And Ride Hailing Companies

    “I am pleased that Council approved the amendments to our City bylaws to support a level playing field between taxis and ride-hailing vehicles,” said Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum. 

    Surrey City Council Amends Bylaws to Support Fair Competition Between Taxi And Ride Hailing Companies

    Chanting Wet'suwet'en Supporters Defy Injunction; Return To B.C. Legislature

    About 300 people were gathered at the front steps, with many crowding at the building's ceremonial gates used by dignitaries including the lieutenant-governor and members of the Royal Family.

    Chanting Wet'suwet'en Supporters Defy Injunction; Return To B.C. Legislature

    B.C. Tells Inquiry Money Laundering Has Warped Economy, Fuelled Opioid Crisis

    B.C. Tells Inquiry Money Laundering Has Warped Economy, Fuelled Opioid Crisis
    Money laundering has distorted British Columbia's economy, fuelled the opioid crisis and overheated the real estate market, the province argued at the start of an inquiry into the criminal activity on Monday.

    B.C. Tells Inquiry Money Laundering Has Warped Economy, Fuelled Opioid Crisis

    Remove Taxi Boundaries: Surrey Board Of Trade Tells The Province

    The Surrey Board of Trade is changing the public narrative for the taxi industry around partnership and innovation.

    Remove Taxi Boundaries: Surrey Board Of Trade Tells The Province