Tags: Moishe

17 Jun 2009, Comments Off

Fixed Rates Officially Going Up, Variable Rates going down.

Author: admin

Reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO.

Great deals only last for a limited time. We all knew it was coming, we just didn’t know how soon…
Canada’s biggest banks are increasing key mortgage rates. Royal Bank of Canada announced the change on five-year, fixed-rate mortgages to 5.45%, an increase of 0.2%.

Bank of Montreal, Toronto-Dominion Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce are following. The changes at RBC and BMO took effect on Tuesday this week, while new rates at TD, Scotiabank and CIBC were to be posted yesterday. ( I haven’t checked the news yet)

And those “special offers” from RBC, BMO and Scotiabank on five-year closed mortgages at 4.15% will also be subject to change without notice, reflecting a 0.2% increase.

On the other hand, variable rates are decreasing from Prime+0.80% to Prime+0.40%.

http://montrealrealestateblog.com/fixed-rates-officially-going-up-variable-rates-going-down/

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

15 Jun 2009, Comments Off

Housing starts rebound to top forecast in May

Author: admin

Canada’s housing construction sector had a better-than-expected May as the seasonally adjusted, annualized rate of starts rose to 128,400 for the month.
Moishe Alexander reviews the trends:

That was ahead of the 126,000 annualized rate that economists had forecast.

In April, the seasonally adjusted annualized rate was 117,600.

“This morning’s housing starts data for May from CMHC provided us with the first sign that a bottom might be forming in Canadian homebuilding activity,” said TD Bank economist Pascal Gauthier.

“Nation-wide homebuilding activity recorded its first broadly based increase since October 2008, both in terms of unit types (singles and multiples) and regions of the country,” he said.

The federal government agency said urban single-home starts increased by 11.1 per cent to 46,900 units last month, while urban multiple-units starts, such as condominiums, rose by a similar percentage to 60,900.

May’s seasonally adjusted annual rate of urban starts increased 22.0 per cent in Ontario, 16.8 per cent in the Prairies, 7.3 per cent in Atlantic Canada, and 3.3 per cent in Quebec. Urban starts declined 5.0 per cent in British Columbia.

Showing how much housing has retreated since last year, the overall seasonally adjusted, annualized rate of construction starts stood at 221,300 units in May 2008.

CMHC said housing starts are expected to improve throughout 2009 and over the next several years “to gradually become more closely aligned to demographic demand, which is currently estimated at about 175,000 units per year.”

Gauthier said starts are expected to remain around 120,000 on average through the remainder of this year.

“The good news part [in that forecast] is that homebuilding activity would cease to be a drag on economic growth and employment heading into next year,” he said.

“The bad news part, assuming our forecast unfolds, is that we do not expect the level of starts to head back above 150,000 units before 2011.” Posted by Thaddeus Warchol