Housing market cools in first quarter


Friday, April 18th, 2008

Eric Beauchesne
Sun

OTTAWA Canada‘s once-hot housing market is clearly cooling with sales falling and the number of unsold homes on the market hitting record highs in the first quarter of the year.

Despite an uptick in sales in March from a three-year low in February, sales of existing homes were down 7.1 per cent in the first quarter from the final quarter of last year, and 13 per cent from the first quarter of 2007, the Canadian Real Estate Association reported Thursday in its preliminary housing market report for March.

And prices were up only 5.5 per cent from a year earlier to an average of $327,620, the smallest increase since the final quarter of 2001, which followed the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in the U.S.

Canada‘s six-year housing market boom is officially over,” said BMO Capital Markets economist Douglas Porter.

But the industry association said there will not be any meltdown in the housing market here as has occurred in the U.S.

“The residential average price continues to increase, unlike conditions in many U.S. markets,” said association president Cal Lindberg. “The size of the increase is returning to what we consider more normal levels for most markets in Canada, reflecting a sound but cooling market for existing homes.”

Sales in the quarter were down in a number of major markets, led by Toronto, which accounts for about one-quarter of all sales in the country. The market softened in Vancouver and Calgary, but remained strong in other markets, hitting record highs in Regina and Saskatoon. Meanwhile, the number of homes listed for sale swelled to a record high.

“The credit crunch has had limited impact on Canadian mortgage lending to date,” said the industry association’s chief economist Gregory Klump. “Resale-housing activity will continue to be supported by rising after-tax incomes, high employment, upbeat consumer sentiment and declining interest rates.”

In March, 26,799 homes traded hands, up 0.9 per cent from February but down 18.7 per cent from the record levels set a year earlier. The average price increased four per cent year-over-year last month to $329,383, with new price records being set in a number of cities, including Saskatoon and Winnipeg.

© The Vancouver Sun 2008

 



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