Tags: recession

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

By: David Petch
Jul 02, 2009

At the present, governments around the globe are printing money as if there were no tomorrow in order to try and prevent debt-laden banks from going under and trying to stimulate the fractional reserve banking system. The past 20 years of economic growth has been based on a “Pay it Forward” basis…someone gets a new couch or car and ends up paying for it over a defined period of time. The expansion of credit in turn allowed for false consumption because most people never really had the money in hand.

In the past, whenever any purchases were made, most people either saved up until they had money in hand or used “Lay Away” programs for purchase (an individual would make biweekly payments until an item was paid for in full and then taken home). As the global economy continues to shrink and get worse, the first knee-jerk reaction is to start saving, which is evident in the US as reached 6.9% year over year. When prices decline, it makes sense to save money as it does not make any sense to buy things when there is economic uncertainty.

During periods of economic contractions, the absolutely worst sectors to be in are retail or any consumer-related businesses that people do not absolutely require, such as getting manicures and pedicures, furniture, cars, etc. Areas that tend to maintain somewhat of a stable environment are Pharmaceutical (especially those that provide life-saving drugs), food and energy sectors. One of the hardest sectors that will get hit in Canada in the coming years will be the government sector. There is so much money being pumped into government up here at present that it is serving as an artificial inflator of the economy.

When the S&P eventually bottoms in late 2009/early 2010, the economic bottom should follow history and be in place 12-18 months afterwards. This suggests that mid to late 2011 should mark the bottom of the global economic recession from a bottom in residential real estate…note: commercial real estate has recently succumbed to the global recession, so it is likely the consumer will bottom before businesses do. In other words, the bottom of the economy could be flat for a subsequent 1-2 years until consumers retrench from their bunkers and again begin spending.

Analysis today will focus on the 10 Year US Treasury Index and how it should behave over the course of the next 6-12 months.

The Rest…MarketOracleUk

http://revolutionradio.org/2009/07/02/in-the-future-interest-rates-will-soar-and-consumers-will-be-sore-also/

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

17 Jun 2009, Comments Off

Canadian Real Estate Prices

Author: admin

All this talk of recession has a lot of people thinking about what their property may be worth in today’s economy. To shed some light on things, I present you with the Canadian Real Estate Accosication’s (CREA) National statistics on the housing market, presented by way of average prices from across the country. It might surprise you that some provinces have seen average price increases from a year ago.

The National Average price in April 2009 was $306,366, while in 2008 it was $316,438. Although this doesn’t look overly great to start with, the national average price drop is largely due to the falling prices in cities that were considered overinflated, such as Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.

Other notables that saw a decline in the average price were Edmonton, down nearly $29,000; and Toronto, down over $13,000. Surprisingly though, Hamilton, Ontario (Steel Town), which is located 30 minutes West of Toronto witnessed an average increase of nearly $3,000. It’s hard to read into the macroeconomics of it, but that increase in price could likely be due to a few factors, such as the revitalization of the city as well as the New GoTrain line that now services Toronto Commuters.

But it’s not bad news for the rest of the country. Provinces such as, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Quebec, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, PEI, and Newfoundland have all seen increases in the average sale prices. (See http://www.crea.ca/public/news_stats/statistics.htm for more details on each).

Overall, the Canadian Real Estate Market appears to be healthy, although making some adjustments in some markets, which we largely feel is due to the strong financial condition of our Big Five Banks. Please visit http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Five_(banks) for more details on the Big Five.

http://newmarketrealestate.blogspot.com/2009/06/canadian-real-estate-prices.html

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO