Single-family home prices drop in almost half of cities


Thursday, January 15th, 2015

Jamie Henry
Other

There was a slight drop in Canada’s house prices in December, according to the latest Teranet-National Bank Composite House Price Index. Repeat sales of single-family homes slipped by 0.2 per cent from the month earlier. Five of the 11 cities studied saw declining prices. Halifax had the largest drop (1.9 per cent), followed by Calgary (1.1 per cent), Quebec (1.0 per cent), Montreal (0.9 per cent) and Vancouver (0.4 per cent). There were increases for Toronto (0.3 per cent), Edmonton (0.2 per cent), Hamilton (0.1 per cent) and Ottawa (0.1 per cent). Prices in Winnipeg and Victoria were unchanged. Annually there were increases in all cities except Quebec and Halifax and the national increase was 4.9 per cent.

House prices declined for the second consecutive month in December, but is this just an indication of real estate’s slowest months of the year?

Teranet-National Bank’s House Price Index showed an overall 0.2 per cent decline, but also stated that, in the past five years, price drops in November and December have been frequent.

According to the report, house prices were down in five of the 11 metropolitan markets surveyed: Halifax (−1.9 per cent), Calgary (−1.1 per cent), Quebec City (−1.0 per cent), Montreal (−0.9 per cent) and Vancouver (−0.4 per cent).

The indexes for Victoria and Winnipeg were flat, while prices were up in Toronto (0.3 per cent), Edmonton (0.2 per cent), Ottawa-Gatineau (0.1 per cent) and Hamilton (0.1 per cent).

In fact, Hamilton house prices reached a new record in December, in line with national reports that Hamilton will be one of the country’s hottest property markets in 2015.

With a 12-month rise of 7.8 per cent, Hamilton was one of four markets that saw an increase in house prices well above the countrywide average in 2014.

Calgary house prices experienced a rise of 8.3 per cent, while Edmonton house prices increased 5.8 per cent and Toronto house prices increased 7.2 per cent.

The 12-month rise was closer to the average in Vancouver (five per cent) but lagged it in Victoria (3.2 per cent) and Winnipeg (1.5 per cent).

Montreal (0.3 per cent) and Ottawa-Gatineau (+0.1 per cent) showed minimal gains, while prices were down from a year earlier in Quebec City (−0.8 per cent) and Halifax (−2.5 per cent).

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