Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Vancouver's April home sales down 16.5% from a year ago: board

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 May, 2023 10:12 AM
  • Vancouver's April home sales down 16.5% from a year ago: board

VANCOUVER — The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says April home sales slid 16.5 per cent from a year ago as new listings remained below historical norms.

The B.C. board says sales for the month totalled 2,741, almost 16 per cent below the 10-year seasonal average.

The composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver hit $1,170,700 last month, down 7.4 per cent from a year ago but up 2.4 per cent from March.

There were 4,307 new listings last month, a 29.7 per cent decrease, when compared with the prior April and a 22 per cent drop from the 10-year seasonal average of 5,525.

The board saw the numbers as a sign that home sales are staging a comeback and headed toward levels seen last spring before eight consecutive interest rate hikes were carried out.

The rate hikes eroded buying power and sent buyers to the sidelines, but the board believes a shift is underway.

"The fact we are seeing prices rising and sales rebounding this spring tells us homebuyers are returning with confidence after a challenging year for our market, with mortgage rates roughly doubling,” Andrew Lis, the board's director of economics and data analytics, said in a news release. 

MORE National ARTICLES

17 year old man stabbed on a bus in Surrey dies

17 year old man stabbed on a bus in Surrey dies
Police say it happened just before 9:30 Tuesday night. Investigators say the victim and his attacker had some sort of altercation while on the bus, not far from the King George SkyTrain station.

17 year old man stabbed on a bus in Surrey dies

Canadians feel less safe than pre-pandemic: poll

Canadians feel less safe than pre-pandemic: poll
Those in B.C. were most likely to say crime and violence are worse since the pandemic hit, at 72 per cent, while people in Quebec were least likely to say so, at 54 per cent. Quebecers were most likely to say things have not changed.

Canadians feel less safe than pre-pandemic: poll

Federal workers vote in favour of strike mandate

Federal workers vote in favour of strike mandate
The Public Service Alliance of Canada can now launch a strike anytime in the next 60 days — with national president Chris Aylward saying workers were prepared to strike as soon as Wednesday. Aylward said at a press conference Wednesday morning that bargaining for fair wages is top of mind, and members are prepared to strike for as long as it takes.

Federal workers vote in favour of strike mandate

Ozempic loophole may trap other drugs: pharmacists

Ozempic loophole may trap other drugs: pharmacists
Canadian Pharmacists Association vice-president of public affairs Joelle Walker said Americans buying cheaper Canadian drugs is nothing new. One of the main challenges, Walker said, is that there isn't a strong sense of the prevalence of mass U.S. buying of Canadian prescription drugs because the data isn't available.

Ozempic loophole may trap other drugs: pharmacists

Class-action lawsuit filed in fatal Vancouver fire

Class-action lawsuit filed in fatal Vancouver fire
The owner of the 110-year-old building and its non-profit manager had failed to ensure fire safety measures were adequate and up-to-date, the lawsuit says, and the city did not enforce safety regulations to the same standards it did elsewhere.

Class-action lawsuit filed in fatal Vancouver fire

Charities struggle with burnout, funding: report

Charities struggle with burnout, funding: report
The report found 57 per cent of respondents said they could not keep up with increasing need for help, 40 per cent reported higher levels of demand than before the pandemic and 22 per cent said demand “significantly exceeds” capacity.

Charities struggle with burnout, funding: report