See which parts of Canada are seeing new home price gains

New home prices in Canada rose by 0.2% in February, the 23rd consecutive month-on-month increase, pushed up by a buoyant market in Calgary, Statistics Canada said on today.

The advance matched analysts’ expectations. Calgary prices rose 1.0% from January — the largest month-over-month increase since May 2007 — on higher material and labour costs. Calgary is the center of Canada’s booming energy industry.

Overall, prices rose in 10 cities, stayed unchanged in nine and fell in two. On a year-over-year basis new housing prices in Canada rose by 2.1% in February, down from 2.2% in January.

The Canadian government, which imposed tighter mortgage rules last July, and the Bank of Canada have long expressed concerns the housing market might overheat.

The new housing price index excludes condominiums, which the government says are a particular cause for concern.

The largest monthly price advances in February came in Regina, where prices were up 1.4%, and in Halifax, where prices were up 0.9% from January.

The Regina increase was largely the result of higher operating costs for builders and a shortage of developed land, while builders cited higher costs for materials, labour and developed land as the primary reasons for the Halifax increase.

Monthly prices declined 0.2% in Ottawa—Gatineau for the second month in a row, while prices fell 0.1% in St. John’s.

Prices remained unchanged in the combined metropolitan region of Toronto and Oshawa following six consecutive months of increases.

Prices were also unchanged in eight other metropolitan regions surveyed.

Source: National Post Wire Services

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