- 注册
- 2012-02-02
- 消息
- 1,389
- 荣誉分数
- 189
- 声望点数
- 223
http://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/ca...feb-fresh-high-teranet-130340197--sector.html
西部城市涨,东部跌。
The Teranet data showed that prices rose in February from the month before in 6 out of 11 cities, mostly in Western Canada, and fell in 5 cities, all of them in Ontario, Quebec and the eastern part of the country.
From a month earlier, prices rose 1.1 percent in Calgary, 0.6 percent in Edmonton, 0.5 percent in Winnipeg, 0.7 percent in Montreal, and 0.9 percent in Victoria and Vancouver. Vancouver's gain was the 10th straight monthly increase.
Prices were down 1.7 percent in Halifax and Quebec City, 0.5 percent in Hamilton, 0.8 percent in Ottawa, and 0.1 percent in Toronto. Toronto prices have risen only twice in the last six months, the report noted.
Year-over-year price gains were seen in 7 of the 11 cities surveyed, the first time since October 2009 that there was price deflation in at least four of the regions covered.
Compared to a year earlier, prices were up 9.6 percent in Calgary, 5.4 percent in Edmonton, 5.0 percent in Hamilton, 1.9 percent in Montreal, 6.1 percent in Toronto, 7.7 percent in Vancouver and 3.5 percent in Winnipeg.
Prices compared to a year earlier were down 4.7 percent in Halifax, 0.6 percent in Ottawa, 2.0 percent in Quebec City and 3.4 percent in Victoria.
西部城市涨,东部跌。
The Teranet data showed that prices rose in February from the month before in 6 out of 11 cities, mostly in Western Canada, and fell in 5 cities, all of them in Ontario, Quebec and the eastern part of the country.
From a month earlier, prices rose 1.1 percent in Calgary, 0.6 percent in Edmonton, 0.5 percent in Winnipeg, 0.7 percent in Montreal, and 0.9 percent in Victoria and Vancouver. Vancouver's gain was the 10th straight monthly increase.
Prices were down 1.7 percent in Halifax and Quebec City, 0.5 percent in Hamilton, 0.8 percent in Ottawa, and 0.1 percent in Toronto. Toronto prices have risen only twice in the last six months, the report noted.
Year-over-year price gains were seen in 7 of the 11 cities surveyed, the first time since October 2009 that there was price deflation in at least four of the regions covered.
Compared to a year earlier, prices were up 9.6 percent in Calgary, 5.4 percent in Edmonton, 5.0 percent in Hamilton, 1.9 percent in Montreal, 6.1 percent in Toronto, 7.7 percent in Vancouver and 3.5 percent in Winnipeg.
Prices compared to a year earlier were down 4.7 percent in Halifax, 0.6 percent in Ottawa, 2.0 percent in Quebec City and 3.4 percent in Victoria.