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Business Briefing
Canadian housing markets: Who’s hot and who’s not
Michael Babad
The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Mar. 14, 2016 8:58AM EDT
Last updated Monday, Mar. 14, 2016 11:49AM EDT
Home prices up
It all comes down to the Vancouver market.
A national reading of Canadian home prices showed the fastest rise for a February since the recession, but it was all because of yet another sizzle in Vancouver.
Prices rose 0.6 per cent in February from January, and 6.5 per cent from a year earlier, according to the Teranet-National Bank home price index released today.
“Though prices were up on the month in six of the 11 metropolitan markets surveyed, the gain of the composite index came entirely from a 3.2-per-cent jump in the Vancouver market, where the real estate board reported the highest-selling February on record,” the group said.
“In the other 10 markets, rises and declines essentially cancelled each other out.”
Aside from Vancouver, prices rose on a monthly basis by 0.9 per cent in Victoria, 0.7 per cent in Quebec City, 0.2 per cent in Toronto, and 0.1 per cent in Winnipeg and Edmonton.
They fell 0.4 per cent in Hamilton and the Ottawa region, 0.9 per cent in Calgary, 1.2 per cent in Montreal, and 2.9 per cent in Halifax.
On an annual basis, the rise in the national index was the fastest since January, 2012, but, again, driven by Vancouver, as well as Hamilton, Toronto and Victoria.
Over the course of the 12 months, prices surged 14.5 per cent in Vancouver, 9.5 per cent in Hamilton, and 9 per cent in Toronto and Victoria. They rose 1.3 per cent in Winnipeg and 0.9 per cent in Quebec City, though slipped 0.2 per cent in Montreal, and 0.3 per cent in Halifax and the Ottawa area.
In Alberta, which has been whacked by the oil shock, prices fell 3.3 per cent in Calgary and 1 per cent in Edmonton from a year earlier.
Vancouver and Toronto are the two cities generally seen as frothy, and both the federal and British Columbia governments have moved to cool them down.
“The high level of sales in both cities might be explained in part by the fact that the new measure requiring at least 10-per-cent down payment on the portion of the purchase price between $500,000 and $1-million applies to new mortgage applications received on Feb. 15 or later,” said Marc Pinsonneault of National Bank.
“It is not binding for mortgage applications received between the announcement on Dec. 11 and Feb. 15 that do not conform to the measure, inasmuch as the mortgage is in place by July 1, 2016,” he added.
“So sales in these expensive cities can be stimulated over the coming months, as well.”
Canadian housing markets: Who’s hot and who’s not
Michael Babad
The Globe and Mail
Published Monday, Mar. 14, 2016 8:58AM EDT
Last updated Monday, Mar. 14, 2016 11:49AM EDT
Home prices up
It all comes down to the Vancouver market.
A national reading of Canadian home prices showed the fastest rise for a February since the recession, but it was all because of yet another sizzle in Vancouver.
Prices rose 0.6 per cent in February from January, and 6.5 per cent from a year earlier, according to the Teranet-National Bank home price index released today.
“Though prices were up on the month in six of the 11 metropolitan markets surveyed, the gain of the composite index came entirely from a 3.2-per-cent jump in the Vancouver market, where the real estate board reported the highest-selling February on record,” the group said.
“In the other 10 markets, rises and declines essentially cancelled each other out.”
Aside from Vancouver, prices rose on a monthly basis by 0.9 per cent in Victoria, 0.7 per cent in Quebec City, 0.2 per cent in Toronto, and 0.1 per cent in Winnipeg and Edmonton.
They fell 0.4 per cent in Hamilton and the Ottawa region, 0.9 per cent in Calgary, 1.2 per cent in Montreal, and 2.9 per cent in Halifax.
On an annual basis, the rise in the national index was the fastest since January, 2012, but, again, driven by Vancouver, as well as Hamilton, Toronto and Victoria.
Over the course of the 12 months, prices surged 14.5 per cent in Vancouver, 9.5 per cent in Hamilton, and 9 per cent in Toronto and Victoria. They rose 1.3 per cent in Winnipeg and 0.9 per cent in Quebec City, though slipped 0.2 per cent in Montreal, and 0.3 per cent in Halifax and the Ottawa area.
In Alberta, which has been whacked by the oil shock, prices fell 3.3 per cent in Calgary and 1 per cent in Edmonton from a year earlier.
Vancouver and Toronto are the two cities generally seen as frothy, and both the federal and British Columbia governments have moved to cool them down.
“The high level of sales in both cities might be explained in part by the fact that the new measure requiring at least 10-per-cent down payment on the portion of the purchase price between $500,000 and $1-million applies to new mortgage applications received on Feb. 15 or later,” said Marc Pinsonneault of National Bank.
“It is not binding for mortgage applications received between the announcement on Dec. 11 and Feb. 15 that do not conform to the measure, inasmuch as the mortgage is in place by July 1, 2016,” he added.
“So sales in these expensive cities can be stimulated over the coming months, as well.”