Tags: cent

8 Jul 2009, Comments Off

June home sales soar 27 per cent

Author: admin

Multiple offers. Frenzied buyers. Higher prices.

In the middle of a recession, Toronto real estate has gone from a buyer’s market to what looks like a seller’s market. But can it last?

Some analysts say the spring fling will be exactly that – a quick bump up in numbers with a much more sombre fall to come.

“You had pent-up demand from the winter where nobody bought anything, and then these really low interest rates that brought everyone back into the market,” said Shaun Hildebrand, senior market analyst for Canada Housing and Mortgage Corp.

The Toronto Real Estate Board reported that 10,955 existing homes were sold in June – up 27 per cent from June of last year. The average home price was $403,972, up 2 per cent from 12 months earlier.

Analysts such as Hildebrand say the rebound appears remarkable, but don’t expect it to last. At least not until job numbers pick up substantially.

“I don’t think the housing market is on a solid enough footing to register the kind of growth we’ve been seeing going forward,” said Hildebrand. While the market is much more resilient than many analysts previously thought, it still isn’t firing on all cylinders and won’t be for some time, he cautioned.

“Shifting mortgage rates and a great unfreezing of confidence have resulted in a very strong wave of home buying in the GTA,” housing analyst Will Dunning said in a report. “But what really matters over longer periods is job creation, and the signals from the market are discouraging.”

The jobless rate in Ontario is forecast to climb sharply to 9.3 per cent this year, according to the Royal Bank of Canada. Last year it was 6.5 per cent.

Much of the weakness in jobs growth is focused on the manufacturing sector, and Ontario is particularly vulnerable, Dunning said.

“I expect the short-term impacts of changing rates and postponed buying will soon pass and the GTA housing market will be weaker in the second half of the year,” he said.

One reason for the uptick in real estate is that remedies to fight the recession, such as low interest rates, have helped turn around the market.

Another reason is that active listings are down by 30 per cent from last year, meaning there are fewer properties to choose from. That causes prices to rise.

“The main reason to list is so you can buy something else,” Dunning said.

“Listings remain weak, which is another reason I think that this wave of buying won’t last much longer.”

Nevertheless, real estate agents such as Royal LePage’s Helena O’Connor did not expect to see multiple offers – where competing buyers bid up the price of a home – in the middle of a recession.

“It was a little surprising,” O’Connor said. “Buyers are really responding to the low mortgage rates.”

Sutton Group realtor Alicia Pang, who quit a comfortable job in banking to become a full-time realtor last year, had some doubts about her career choice over the winter. But she is very busy now.

“I got my licence just when there was a slowdown, so my timing could have been better,” Pang said. “But it worked out okay. I knew things would improve in the spring, but I never imagined the market would be this crazy.”

Pang said about 80 per cent of her clients are first-time buyers driven by record-low mortgage rates.

A one-year closed mortgage can be had for as little as 2.75 per cent, while a five-year closed rate can be found at 4.39 per cent, according to website Canadamortage.com.

“Because the listings are down, it’s hard out there for buyers,” Pang said.

“For choice properties, if you’re not out there on the first day, they’re gone.”

Toronto Star

http://yorkregionmortgages.blogspot.com/2009/07/june-home-sales-soar-27-per-cent.html

brought by Moishe Alexander , Canadian Funding Corp CEO

26 Jun 2009, Comments Off

Don’t believe the housing hype

Author: admin

Judging by the latest real estate data, the Canadian housing market could scarcely be better. Average home prices are up more than 16 per cent this year, and in May they hit an all-time monthly high, according to the Canadian Real Estate Association. By those numbers, Canada didn’t just sidestep the housing market crash that continues to plague the United States, it sailed right through it virtually unscathed. And yet, there are plenty of signs that the Canadian housing market is still sitting on some very shaky ground—and even the potential that Canada’s big housing crash is yet to come.

There is one particular statistic that suggests trouble could be brewing. Unlike in the U.S., Britain and most European countries, household debt in Canada is, incredibly, still growing. That rising debt is being driven largely by record-low interest rates. Canadians have been buying homes not so much because they can afford them, but because many believe there’s never been a better time to buy, with lending rates so low. “There is no doubt that record-low mortgage rates have juiced Canada’s housing market,” wrote BMO economist Sal Guatieri, in a recent newsletter. Houses are barely more affordable now than they were during the market peak. And as people keep buying, houses may only become less and less affordable.

Not everyone agrees with the CRE figures that suggest the market has managed such a quick and painless turnaround, either. According to the Teranet-National Bank housing price index, Canada’s housing market is not recovering yet. Home prices have been falling for the past eight months, according to its latest statistics. Vancouver, Calgary and Toronto have each experienced significant price drops compared to last year. This would seem more in line with what one would expect after an unprecedented six-year housing boom in which home prices shot up 80 per cent.

It is, of course, possible that the correction will, ultimately, be modest. Guatieri expects that interest rates will remain low and income growth will remain subdued this year, before picking up next year. That will keep housing prices down, but would likely mean the worst of the correction is behind us.

But if mortgage rates go up sharply then “affordability will get crunched again,” says Guatieri, in an interview. Things could get much, much worse. And that’s not an unthinkable scenario. Some banks have already boosted interest rates twice this year. Then there is the possibility that job losses continue and the economy doesn’t recover quickly, putting further strains on household finances. The low interest rates and continued debt problems mean that Canadians could find them themselves badly over-exposed.

Guatieri isn’t forecasting a housing market crash. But, as he wrote last week, “it’s worth remembering that the further house prices go up and the longer household finances get stretched, the greater the risk of a painful correction. Anyone who doubts that should talk to an American or British homeowner.”

http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/06/26/dont-believe-the-housing-hype/

brought by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

16 Jun 2009, Comments Off

Vancouver real estate prices will drop less than expected

Author: admin

Reviewed and recommended by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

A recent surge in real estate sales has caused the Canadian Real Estate Association to sharply revise its expectations for price drops in British Columbia.
CREA, in its forecast released on Thursday, estimated that B.C.’s average house price will drop less than seven per cent over 2009, more than 3 percentage points less than the 10.6 per cent drop forecast in February.
CREA’s forecast that B.C.’s average price will drop to $423,300, instead of the $406,300 average it forecast earlier.
Going forward to 2010, CREA is now predicting that B.C. prices will start edging up again by almost two per cent compared with a 2010 drop of 0.6 per cent forecasted in February.
B.C. sales rose in April from the previous month, the B.C. Real Estate Association said Thursday in a news release, as buyers were drawn back into the market by lower prices and rock-bottom mortgage rates. And the inventory of unsold homes across the province dropped to the lowest level in 12 months, the association said, edging the ratio of sales to active listings close to the zone housing economists consider balanced between buyers and sellers.
“An increase in consumer demand combined with fewer homes for sale has trended the market near balanced conditions,” Cameron Muir, chief economist for the B.C. Real Estate Association said in an interview.
April was the third straight month that sales were higher than the previous month.

Peter Raab

http://www.peterraab.ca/vancouver-real-estate-market-updates/2009/05/vancouver-real-estate-prices-will-drop.html