Canada’s new mortgage rules could cool our housing market

Friday, September 7th, 2012

TD Bank says tighter mortgage rules should do the job of cooling Canada’s hot housing market in the short term, but higher interest rates will be needed to return the market to saner levels.

The bank’s chief economist Craig Alexander estimates the new rules, which went into effect July 9, will shave five percentage points off sales activity and cut prices by 3% on average during the second half of this year and early 2013.

In the next three years, he expects the combination of the tighter rules and anticipated modest increases in interest rates will result in a 10% price correction on homes.

While it is early, there are already tentative signs that the new rules have tempered sales, if not prices, especially in the country’s hottest markets — Toronto and Vancouver.

The Toronto Real Estate Board reported Thursday that sales of existing homes in the greater municipal area fell 12.5% from last year, although the average price of $479,095 was 6.5% higher.

Meanwhile, the Vancouver board said sales dropped 30.7% in August, while the average price was only 0.5% lower at $609,500.

In July, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty reduced the amortization rate on new insured mortgages to 25 years from 30, bringing the maximum period for paying off a home back to the historic level. It was the fourth time Flaherty had tightened mortgage rules in as many years, incrementally dropping to amortization period from the high-water mark of 40 years.

Alexander says the latest moves, which hike mortgage costs by $140 a month on the average priced home, may be even more effective than the previous efforts in slowing the market.

But if the experience of the previous three moves are any guide, the slowdown will be temporary, lasting a few quarters, after which Canadians will dive back into the market.

For a longer lasting solution to the overheated market, Alexander said Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney will need to hike interest rates to make borrowing more difficult and expensive.

“Interest rates simply cannot stay at current levels indefinitely,” he says in the paper.

On Wednesday, Carney kept the trendsetting policy rate at one%, marking two years that it has remained at the super-low level, and few economists expect him to act before mid-2013.

Canadians have taken advantage of the cheap borrowing costs to buy homes, cottages, cars and other consumer items, but the result is that household debt has hit record levels at 152% of disposable income.

Alexander says debt would even be higher if Ottawa hadn’t begun tightening mortgage rules in 2008.

“Our models suggest that had the government not tightened mortgage rules between 2008 and 2011, the Canadian household debt-to-income ratio would have reached 160% this year,” he said.

That’s about the level the U.S. and the United Kingdom reached before the collapse, although not all factors are similar.

Alexander says he believes the latest rule changes would trim about one percentage point off credit growth.

Source: Julian Beltrame, Canadian Press

See what’s predicted for condo prices across Canada

Thursday, August 30th, 2012

A new condo report suggests first-time buyers, retirees and population growth will continue to fuel demand and price growth for the compact living spaces over the next few years.

The study by Genworth Canada found that average condo resale prices are expected to rise next year in seven of the eight metropolitan centres studied.

Prices in Toronto are projected to jump 2.5 per cent to $312,352.

The highest increase however, is expected to be in Edmonton where prices could rise 3.2 per cent.
Vancouver is the only city where condo prices are expected to drop, by two per cent to $348,152.

The report stands in contrast to warnings from economists and officials that the condo market in some hot markets is reaching bubble territory that could soon burst.

The Bank of Canada and federal Finance Minister Jim Flaherty have cautioned Canadians repeatedly to moderate borrowing on real estate, declaring household debt to be the domestic economy’s number one enemy.

The central bank noted certain segments of the housing market that have a persistent oversupply — such as condos in Toronto — face a higher risk of a price correction.

Genworth — which earns revenue from selling mortgage insurance — notes that rising prices for single-detached homes are driving first-time buyers to condos, but retirees also continue to prop up demand.

It suggests that the population is expected to grow in all eight cities studied over the next few years, while employment growth and low interest rates should also support the market.

“This data corroborates our view that the demand for condos in Canada, particularly at the price-point we insure, is well supported by our economy and our population,” said Brian Hurley, chairman and CEO of Genworth Canada.

“For those seeking to own a home affordably in urban centres, condos remain a good option.”

The Genworth Canada report, produced with the Conference Board of Canada, reviewed trends in Quebec City, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver and Victoria.

Census figures for 2011 released in February show multi-unit dwellings — a category that includes condominiums — making up roughly half of all new housing stock, a category traditionally led by detached homes.

The numbers also indicate that Canadians are flocking to urban centres. Toronto’s population jumped more than 17 per cent over the previous census period in 2006.

A recent CMHC report said housing starts and home sales have been strong in 2012 — particularly when it comes to multiple-dwelling units such as townhouses, condos and apartments — but will soften moderately in coming months into 2013.

Source: Sunny Freeman, Canadian Press

Vancouver housing affordability is getting increasingly difficult

Wednesday, August 29th, 2012

While owning a single-family detached bungalow in Vancouver would take up 91 per cent of a typical household’s pre-tax income according to an RBC report, a Vancouver mortgage broker doesn’t expect a huge drop in prices anytime soon.

Mortgage broker Dave Foran said he expects the market to pick up in September, once the normal summer lull is over.

While prices have come down a bit during the lull, those decreases are not reflected in the latest RBC Economics Housing Trends and Affordability Report, released Monday and which covers the second quarter of 2012, said Robert Hogue, senior economist at RBC.

It found that “extreme unaffordability conditions” in the Vancouver housing market are dragging down the provincial and national measures as well.

“Housing affordability in British Columbia remained poor and worsening in the most recent quarter,” said Robert Hogue, senior economist at RBC. “The situation is far less severe in other parts of the province. In Victoria, for instance, the share of income needed to carry the costs of a mortgage at market prices for some housing types is almost half that of Vancouver.”

Hogue said he expects the next quarterly report will show improved affordability due to falling prices, but that an interest rate hike early next year would send the cost of owning a home in Vancouver upward again. RBC expects the Bank of Canada will raise interest rates in the first quarter of 2013, Hogue said.
Foran’s clients seem to be on the same page as RBC.

Foran said he has a higher-than-average number of clients with pre-approved mortgages waiting to see if prices will come down, while many don’t want to wait because they’re concerned about interest rates going up.

“Some are being quite cautious, while others are jumping in to get a good interest rate,” Foran said. “I don’t see a huge drop in prices coming or a huge increase in interest rates.”

While Foran agreed that single family homes in Vancouver are not very affordable, he said there are many other options, such as townhouses or condos, that are still within reach.

“A lot of the builders are getting away from single-family homes,” Foran said. “I think people are going where they can afford.”

Vancouver has the least affordable houses in the country, by far, although resales are falling and the market has cooled. Year-to-date resales have fallen 18 per cent in Vancouver, compared to a year ago, while the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver reported that July sales were the lowest total in the region since 2000, with sales 31.2 per cent below the 10-year July sales average.

The new housing price index slipped 0.9 per cent in Vancouver in June 2012, compared with June 2011, Statistics Canada reported earlier this month, while the MLS Home Price Index composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Greater Vancouver over the last 12 months has increased 0.6 per cent to $616,000 and declined 0.7 per cent in July 2012 compared to June 2012.

New mortgage rules were brought in last month that shorten the maximum amortization to 25 years from 30, which is also expected to dampen the market.

Despite these factors, affordability declined for all housing categories, with the RBC measures for Vancouver going up between 0.4 percentage points and 2.2 percentage points in the second quarter.
The report says that in Vancouver, home ownership costs, including mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes, take up 91 per cent of a typical household’s monthly pre-tax income. As a comparison, Edmonton’s affordability measure is 32.4 per cent and Toronto’s is 54.5 per cent.

Source: Tracy Sherlock, Vancouver Sun

Home ownership in Canada is set to reach record levels

Saturday, August 18th, 2012

The Canadian real estate industry is in a tight spot these days.

With home-ownership rates headed for record levels and the federal government tightening lending rules to cool the market, the question now is whether we have reached the saturation point.

Bank of Nova Scotia economist Adrienne Warren says that when the latest census figures come out next month she expects us to be in the elite company — depending on your view — of countries with more than 70% of households owning their own homes. Based on the 2006 census, we were at 68.4%. “It’s similar to the U.S., U.K. and Australia when they came up with the mid-decade census,” Ms. Warren said.

Some countries, like Italy and Spain, could be as high as 80% while in others with expensive real estate, like Switzerland, home-ownership rates are more like 30%, she said.

Ms. Warren said the biggest jump in home-ownership rates going into the 2006 census was among young people buying condominiums. Do we need another census to tell us that that group expanded or can we just look up at the cranes across the country? “It was people in their early 20s buying as opposed to waiting until they got older. It probably continued,” Ms. Warren said.

Interestingly enough, the United States is believed to have cracked that 70% threshold before the bottom fell out of its housing market.

Already Ottawa has stuck a pin in the housing balloon with new rules, including a restriction that limits amortizations to 25 years, which ultimately increases monthly payments for consumers and limits how much they can borrow.

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions added its own rules tightening up regulations for financial institutions.

“The government is saying you should not be a homeowner if you cannot afford it,” said Benjamin Tal, deputy chief economist at CIBC World Markets Inc.

The Canadian Real Estate Association released data last week that showed home prices across the country had actually slipped 2% from a year ago to an average of $353,147.

“We are at the peak of home ownership in Canada,” Mr. Tal said. “In fact, we are probably too high and it will probably go down.”

It’s not that 70% is some type of threshold we can’t break through but renting is becoming that much more attractive as the gap between home ownership and renting costs widens.

It’s impossible to argue against the emotion of owning your home or the advantage of forced savings that comes with a mortgage — a clear edge for people with no financial discipline.

The principal advantage is you can leverage your investment by putting only 5% down because the government will back your mortgage with the bank. But leverage means nothing when your investment is decreasing in value — it just compounds your losses.

If you consider that average $353,147 home with a 5% down payment, it will cost you close to $1,600 in monthly mortgage costs, even at today’s 3% interest rates with a 25-year amortization. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said in June the average two-bedroom apartment in new and existing structures was $887 a month. Add in other home-ownership costs like taxes and the gap widens.

Beyond the current expansion, there’s no arguing against the long, steady price appreciation of housing, which has been going on for decades, but there is an alternative to home ownership if you want upside exposure to the market.

Michael Smith, an analyst at Macquarie Equities Research, has published a report for the past five years comparing condo returns to apartment real estate investment trusts.

“REITs win,” said Mr. Smith, adding in a report in January the REITs would have returned 31.5% over the past year compared to a condo return of 12.4% in Toronto and 6.1% in Calgary. Going back another four years, the numbers are even more in favour of the public vehicles.

“What I would say now, since I did the last study, is if anything the outlook for the REIT versus the condo is even more compelling given where the condo market seems to be correcting,” Mr. Smith said.

Sam Kolias, chief executive of Boardwalk Real Estate Investment Trust, Canada’s largest apartment owner, says he is already seeing the push back into apartments.

“If you wanted to be hedged against housing [going up], you could rent and buy stock in our company,” said Mr. Kolias, who added that occupancy rates have climbed close to 99% as house prices have risen steadily. “We’ve never been as full as we are now.”

While this may all be bad news for housing, Phil Soper, chief executive of Royal LePage Real Estate Services, still sees room for expansion.

“There is nothing magical about 70%. The U.S. rate fell from this rate because of a collapse in their financial system,” said Mr. Soper, who points out home ownership in the U.S. is still about 66%, even after “one of the worst meltdowns.”

He said one key driver of the housing market that has not changed is the rule that allows consumers in with just a 5% down payment.

“We have public policy in place that supports home ownership,” Mr. Soper said.

Okay, you can probably still get into the housing market. But with prices falling and the gap between renting and carrying a home widening, the question is do you really want to make that investment?

Source: Garry Marr, Financial Post

What are the latest Canadian home prices?

Friday, August 17th, 2012

Home prices continued to decline across the country in July, according to Canadian Real Estate Association data released Wednesday.

The Ottawa-based group said the average price of a home sold last month was $353,147, a decline of 2 percent from a year earlier. The year-over-year decline in June was 0.8 percent.

“Prices are off their recent peaks in Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto, but remain above year-ago levels in most markets,” the group said in a release.

Activity was up from the previous month in Kingston, Ont., Chilliwack, B.C., and Calgary, offset by fewer sales in Toronto, Newfoundland and Labrador, and Edmonton. Actual sales across the country were up 3.3 percent overall from a year ago.

Much of the decline in the national average can be blamed on Vancouver’s volatile market.

An economist at BMO Financial Group called it the “Vancouver Manouevre” since price drops in the West Coast city brought down the national average despite 19 of 26 cities experiencing year-over-year increases.

The city’s average sale price dropped more than 12 percent to $667,462 from $761,763 last year.

A senior economist at Royal Bank of Canada said the city’s lack of affordable homes is pulling down the market.

“We still believe that Vancouver is probably the most stressed market right now because of extremely poor affordability,” said RBC economist Robert Hogue.

“Plot the resale figures over the last year or so and you see a fairly significant decline in resales, so I think that this does the fit the definition of correction,” he said.

But a B.C. real estate economist said speculation of a market correction in Vancouver is unwarrwanted, as the economy continues to heal.

“Typically to see a price correction you need to see a macroeconomic shock — recession, very high unemployment, for example — or you need to see interest rates go up very dramatically in a short period of time. Both of those we don’t see on the horizon,” said Cameron Muir, the British Columbia Real Estate Association’s chief economist.

He said one-third of the market is first-time buyers, of which the market has no shortage.

“As long as we have first-time buyers that can get into the market to buy the homes from the people who are moving up, moving over, moving down, then the market should remain healthy,” Mr. Muir said.

Meanwhile, Toronto experienced a cooling, with prices increasing at a slower rate of 3.9 percent year over year, which BMO economist Douglas Porter called a “just-right” pace in a note Wednesday.

Mr. Hogue said the market across Canada is moderating and low resale numbers in the past three months were a result of compensation for a strong winter market and do not necessarily spell an impending pronounced correction.

“We believe that much of this easing was payback for a stronger-than-expected start to the year when warmer than usual weather this past winter and mortgage rate promotions by financial institutions provided a temporary boost to activity,” he said.

The Canadian Real Estate Association said tighter mortgage and lending regulations seemed to have cooled Canada’s national housing market, even in the bigger markets.

“Recent changes to mortgage regulations were widely expected to temper sales and prices in Greater Toronto and Greater Vancouver, and the data released today confirms that,” said Wayne Moen, president of the association, in a statement.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Wednesday it may be too early to determine the extent of the impact of mortgage insurance reform, but that market moderation is a good thing.

“We want to avoid, obviously, the kind of thing that happened in the U.S. market, the Irish market and other markets in the Western economies with respect to their housing. So we want to have moderation,” he told The Canadian Press.

Source: Julia Johnson, Financial Post

BC’s housing market forecast doesn’t look too bad, says CMHC

Thursday, August 16th, 2012

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation is forecasting a stable housing market for British Columbia with light upticks in sales numbers, average prices and housing starts in 2013.

“Factors in 2013 driving the housing market are expected to be a little bit stronger,” Carol Frketich, B.C. regional economist for CMHC said. “There is expected to be a bit of a pick up in job growth next year, economic growth and demographic growth as well.”

Housing starts will increase to 28,500 homes for this year in B.C., from 26,400 starts in 2011, and then rise to 30,100 homes in 2013, CMHC said.

Most of the growth in housing starts for 2012 has been in multiple-family housing, but in 2013, multiple-family housing starts will level off, while single-detached homes start to rise, Frketich said.

“We tend to see more single-detached home starts when resale market conditions are stronger, so that’s why we’ve got that stable level of single-detached this year,” Frketich said. People who are looking to buy can find homes on the resale market.”

She said CMHC expects 9,900 single-detached housing starts in 2013, up from 8,900 this year. That compares to 11,500 in 2010.

Average prices, which are down about five per cent in Vancouver this year from last year, are expected to climb about 2.6 per cent by 2013, both in Vancouver and across B.C., Frketich said.

The average MLS price in B.C. is forecast to be $522,200 for 2012, down 7 per cent from 2011, but should increase to $537,700 as resale activity picks up next year, CMHC forecast. The resale market in B.C. will maintain balanced supply and demand conditions through 2013, CMHC said. The number of sales will continue to moderate through 2012, but should also pick up in 2013, Frketich said.

Vancouver renters will be looking at lower vacancy rates and higher rents for the fall, Frketich said. The vacancy rate is projected to fall to 1.1 per cent in October from 1.4 per cent in October 2011, while the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment will climb to $1,005 from $964 in the same time period.

Nationally, the CMHC is forecasting a moderate slowdown in new-home construction starts as well as sales of existing houses.

The CMHC national forecast suggests next year will be somewhat softer than estimates the federal agency issued in June, while 2012 may be somewhat stronger nationally than previously expected.

Nationally, CMHC estimates there will be between 196,800 and 217,000 units of housing started in 2012. In 2013, CMHC now estimates national housing starts will be in the range of 173,000 to 207,400 units.

The national average price for property sales through CREA members is forecast to be between $351,300 and $378,400 in 2012 and between $358,000 and $395,800 in 2013, CMHC said Tuesday.

Source: Tracy Sherlock, Vancouver Sun

Canada’s average house price drops 2% in July

Thursday, August 16th, 2012

Price declines in Vancouver dragged the national average home price lower in July, even as most markets saw slight increases compared to the same month a year ago.

The Canadian Real Estate Association said yesterday the national average price for homes sold in July 2012 was $353,147, down 2 per cent from the same month a year earlier.

“Prices are off their recent peaks in Greater Vancouver and Greater Toronto, but remain above year-ago levels in most markets,” the agency said in a release.

Overall, the sales activity was up 3.3 per cent across the country, meaning more homes sold in July 2012 than changed hands in the same month in 2011. But the number of newly listed homes fell 3.3 per cent in July compared to the previous month.

The average price was higher in 7 out of 10 markets, CREA said, but declines in the large Vancouver market dragged the national average lower. Stripping Vancouver out of the equation would have resulted in a 1.1 per cent average annual gain, CREA said.

“The national housing market remains firmly entrenched in balanced market territory,” CREA said.

The slight real estate slowdown is a reflection of Canadians’ wariness of taking on more debt, TD Bank said in a note following the release of the data. Job growth has effectively stalled over the last few months, owing to an uncertain outlook for the global economy, the bank noted.

“From an economic risk perspective, the moderation in the resale housing market is a positive development,” TD economist Francis Fong said. “Slowing the pace of debt accumulation and housing activity now reduces the risk that households will get into financial trouble down the road when interest rates do eventually rise.”

TD has been calling for a “modest correction” of between 10 and 15 per cent for some time, Fong says. “Today’s report provides some evidence that that correction is now beginning to take place,” he noted.

Source: CBC

Is Canada’s hot housing market finally cooling?

Friday, August 10th, 2012

Canada’s hot housing market showed signs of cooling on Thursday as July housing starts slowed more sharply than expected, but housing prices were still climbing in June and analysts said a real slowdown may not come until late in 2012.

Ground breaking on new homes fell to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 208,500 units in July, according to the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corp, a sharp slowdown from the 222,100 units in June and below the forecasts of analysts in a Reuters poll, who had expected 213,300 starts.

It was the first time in seven months that the rate of starts fell below the six-month trend, and a government decision to tighten mortgage lending from July was expected to contribute to further slowing as 2012 draws to a close.

“We do expect that the impact of tighter mortgage regulations announced in late June will slow housing demand, but the impact on the construction and starts data is unlikely to show up until later in the year,” David Tulk, chief Canada macro strategist for TD Securities, said in a research note.

This week, Scotiabank forecast that home prices in Canada will fall 10% over the next two to three years. But other economists have predicted as much as a 25% correction.

The hot market has sparked fears of a bubble, particularly in Toronto, Canada’s largest city, and in Vancouver, as low interest rates fueled condominium building and double-digit annual price increases for existing homes.

The bulk of the pullback in July housing starts came in the multiple unit segment, where starts in the volatile condo market in British Columbia braked. That was in line with earlier data that has shown cooling in the Vancouver real estate market.

Multiple unit starts dropped 7.6% to 123,000 annualized units, the lowest level since February. Single unit starts fell 4.0% to 64,000 annualized units.

The slowdown in July pushed starts below the average for the second quarter and suggested the housing sector may not drive Canadian gross domestic product growth for much longer.

Mindful of the U.S. housing boom that was left unchecked until it burst, the Canadian government in July tightened conditions for homebuyers and mortgage lenders in a bid to deflate a possible bubble before it pops. The changes took effect in July.

This week Bank of Canada Mark Carney also stressed that despite global economic turmoil, interest rate hikes were still on the table in Canada.

Other data showed that prices of new homes in Canada rose by 0.2% in June, the 15th consecutive month-on-month increase, and continued strength in large cities such as Toronto and Calgary, Statistics Canada data showed.

The advance matched market expectations and follows the 0.3% month-on-month-gain in May.

Prices in Toronto, which accounts for 26.6% of the entire market, rose 0.3% in June, while prices in Calgary, where the booming energy industry has fueled demand, were up by 0.5%. New housing prices rose in 13 metropolitan regions, were unchanged in six and fell in two. Prices in June 2012 increased by 2.3% from June 2011 compared to the 2.4% year-on-year advance recorded in May 2012.

Source: Andrea Hopkins, Reuters

Canadian home sales drop and so do prices

Monday, July 16th, 2012

The number of Canadian homes sold last month dropped more than four per cent from the level in June 2011, the first year-over-year decline in sales volume since April 2011, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday.

Resales of homes were also down 1.3 per cent in June from May — the second month-to-month decline — with a total of 46,444 transactions through CREA members. That was down from 48,591 in June 2011, the association said.

The national average home price in June was $369,339, down 0.8 per cent from the same month last year, CREA said.

However, CREA said its MLS Home Price Index — which the association says is a better measure because it adjusts for different types of properties sold — increased 5.1 per cent between May and June 2012.

Prices increased in Calgary, remained strong in Toronto and continued to slow in Vancouver.

“Canada’s housing market lost a little altitude in June, but it’s still flying pretty high,” association president Wayne Moen said in a news release.

“That said, sales activity and average prices bucked the national easing trend in a number of markets, which underscores that all real estate is local,” Moen said.

There have been several reports saying some real estate markets and some types of housing are over valued, although there’s a range of opinions about how much and how quickly prices will decline.

Economists and consumers have been closely watching for signs that demand has softened to the point where prices will start going down.

But the association, which represents real-estate boards and associations that handle most of the country’s property transactions through the MLS system, said Monday the decline in sales activity and an increase in new listings resulted in a “more balanced” national housing market in June.

The number of newly listed homes rose 1.4 per cent in June compared to May, led by the Toronto market. Some 42 local markets, out of 100 markets across the country, registered a monthly increase in new listings of at least one per cent, the association said.

In the first half of 2012, a total of 257,193 homes traded hands over Canadian MLS Systems, up 4.7 per cent from the same period in 2011.

Gregory Klump, CREA’s chief economist, said home buyers didn’t rush to make purchases before the latest restrictions on mortgage regulations came into effect in July.

“That’s a big change compared to what we saw as a response to previously announced changes,” Klump said.

“It will take some time before the compound effect of previous and recent changes to regulations on Canada’s housing market becomes apparent.”

Under new mortgage rules announced in June by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, borrowers will be allowed to use up to 80 per cent of their property’s value as collateral for home-equity loans, down from 85 per cent.

In addition, the maximum amortization period dropped to 25 years from 30 years for government insured mortgages.

Flaherty also said government-backed mortgage insurance will be limited to homes with a purchase price of less than $1 million.

Source: LuAnn LaSalle, The Canadian Press

Toronto’s condo sales may be down but they’re still way above average

Wednesday, July 11th, 2012

Numbers may not lie, but they can certainly tell different versions of the truth.

Take the year-to-date sales numbers released by the Building Industry and Land Development Association (BILD) for new homes and condos sold across the Greater Toronto Area between January and May. During that time, 8,924 new high-rise units were sold — down 22.4% from last year. Low-rise sales during the same period, though, were up 1.6%, at 8,040 sales.

All of that would seem to signify a bad year for the new high-rise market, and a good year for low-rise — except that’s not the case, says George Carras, president of market analysis firm RealNet Canada, which provided the data to BILD. “It’s down [from last year], but relative to the last 12 years it’s the second best year,” he says of the high-rise market. “In fact, when you do the average of the last 12 years, you’re about 37% above average. You’re still seeing on a relative basis very strong sales over the long term.”

Low-rise, though, is a different story. Though sales of new low-rise homes were higher than last year, they were down 25% compared to long-term averages, Mr. Carras says.

Put low-rise and high-rise sales together, though, and what do you come up with? A pretty average year so far, he admits — down 12.7% from 2011’s record numbers. Overall, sales from January to May were at 16,964 units sold, compared with long-term average sales of 17,293 during the same time. “You’re almost right on average in total,” he says.

“The main difference, of course, is the shift in the kind of housing. And that’s continuing.”

Another difference is price. With supply down in the low-rise sector, prices are rising there. RealNet calculated the average index price for a low-rise home at $607,893 in May, “the first time it’s ever gone beyond $600,000,” Mr. Carras says. In the high-rise sector, meanwhile, prices have been levelling off in general, though did rise in May to $439,549. “You usually look at a price gap between low-rise and high-rise, and in the long-term it tended to be about $78,000,” he says. “This is the widest gap on record.”

Affordability continues to drive the high-rise market, adds Jasmine Cracknell, partner with Toronto real-estate consulting firm N. Barry Lyon Consultants Limited. The June 21 announcement by Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, reducing the maximum mortgage amortization period to 25 years from 30 years, will see that trend continue, she predicts.

“Affordability will be much more critical … now somebody who qualified for a 700-square-foot condo before will have to get a 600-square-foot condo,” she says. “Some people’s expectations might have to be lowered in terms of what they can afford.”

The result, she adds, will be a market slowdown — the very intention of the change. Did Toronto, specifically, need it, though? Ms. Cracknell doesn’t think so. “It was slowing anyway,” she says.

Source: Lisa Van de Ven, National Post


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