Tag Archive for canadian cities

Economic Growth to Slow, Housing to Stay Balanced

PropertyWire.ca

According to a recent report released by the Conference Board of Canada, the Canadian economy is expected to slow slightly in 2011 in most major centres.

The Metropolitan Outlook covers 27 census metropolitan areas. Of these 27, there is expectation for only a handful -  Windsor, Calgary, Oshawa, Regina, Saskatoon, London, Sherbrooke, Winnipeg, and Thunder Bay -  to see higher real gross domestic product (GDP) growth this year.

“Most Canadian cities rebounded well from the recession. This year, however, a weaker domestic economy, winding down of federal and provincial government stimulus measures and uncertain economic conditions in the United States will result in stable or lower growth in a majority of cities,” said Mario Lefebvre, Director, Centre for Municipal Studies

In terms of overall economic growth, in the top spot as the fastest growing Metropolitan economy for 2011, is Windsor. On the heels of growth of 3.5 % last year, there is an expectation that the GDP will rise by 3.9% in 2011- thanks in part to an expected cash injection in the construction industry, via the $1.6-billion Windsor-Essex Parkway project which will begin in 2011.

Similarly, Calgary will continue to grow promisingly- buoyed in part by the robust energy sector. There is forecasted growth of by 3.7 % in 2011, and expectations that it will exceed 4.0% in 2012.

In terms of housing, Robin Wiebe, Senior Economist with the Conference Board of Canada says that most of the markets are currently balanced; “Of 28 markets surveyed, 23 of them are balanced. Of the remaining five, two are in buyers market positions (Saskatoon and Trois Rivieries) and the other three are in sellers’ position (Thunder Bay, Sudbury and Oshawa).”

Wiebe holds hope that balance will be maintained in the Canadian housing market through the next year. “The real issue here is, we have not half bad employment numbers and reasonably low interest rates, which are good for the market.  There is also the introduction of mortgage rule changes- which have yet to take effect.  There may be a bit of a rush to market to buy for people who won’t qualify under those changes- before they take effect. This might bring sales forward.”

“There are enough good things present in our economy to avoid tipping too far into buyers’ market territory. There is an expectation, as well, that interest rates will remain low, and so affordability is still present. There is also expectation that employment numbers will continue to stay in a good range.”

————————————————————————————————————–

Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

————————————————————————————————————–

Incoming search terms for the article:

Home prices rise 10.4% in 6 cities

CBC News

Home prices in six Canadian cities grew by 10.4 per cent during the year ending in August, according to the Teranet-National Bank composite house price index released Wednesday.

Toronto registered the largest gain, at 12.5 per cent, while Calgary’s was the smallest, at five per cent.

Prices rose 0.2 per cent from July, the smallest gain since the index began climbing 16 months ago, National Bank Financial said in a release.

Prices in Ottawa rose 1.4 per cent and Halifax gained 0.9 per cent, while prices fell in Calgary and Vancouver.

The index tracks changes in the prices of homes in six cities — Halifax, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver — that have changed hands at least twice.

It is based on data collected from public land registries. The index had a base value of 100 in June 2005.

That would mean, for example, that an index value of 130 today meant that home prices had increased 30 per cent since June 2005.

————————————————————————————————————–

Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

————————————————————————————————————–

Incoming search terms for the article:

Fear of housing bubble seems overblown

By Jay Bryan, Postmedia News

One of the country’s leading economics think-tanks, the Conference Board of Canada, has become the latest entrant in the long-running debate over Canadian housing prices. Its take: no bubble.

This contrasts sharply with a report last week from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, which said Canada’s “housing bubble” is “an accident waiting to happen.”

Back at the Conference Board, economist Mario Lefebvre acknowledges that home sales have fallen sharply this year, but points out that this is hardly a sign of distress after a period when sales were far too high to be sustainable. Instead, he concludes, it’s just a return to normal.

More important, on the price front, “there’s been no decline to talk about,” Lefebvre said.

Prices rose in July from June in 19 of 28 Canadian cities and all 28 had prices that were above year-ago levels.

That’s not to say that prices will keep rising.

Lefebvre expects to see a “pause” in price growth for most cities in the next year or so as Canada’s economic growth slows. And prices could edge down by 2% to 4% in the hottest western markets, like Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Regina and Saskatoon. But that’s hardly a bust.

This is a stark contrast to the truly frightening housing outlook published last week by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, a left-leaning non-profit group that said a worst-case scenario for the bursting of the housing “bubble” would see prices plummet by 20% to 38% in the biggest Canadian cities. Even its best-case scenario would envision drops of between 19% and 29%.

Comment: And most people who know anything about real estate have spoken out against this report, calling it wrong and proving it to be incorrect. It is terrible alarmist claptrap at its worst.

This is a truly horrendous scenario. The catastrophic recent U.S. housing meltdown saw a national drop of about 30%.

It’s hard to accept that people looking at the same Canadian housing market could come to such wildly different conclusions, but if you look behind the numbers, a clearer picture begins to appear.

The Centre for Policy Alternatives analyst, David Macdonald, begins with the assumption that there’s a reasonable range of housing prices determined mostly by people’s median income. (Median income is the level at which half the population is above and half is below.)

Macdonald looked back at the 1980s and 1990s and found that during the whole period, home prices stayed between three and four times the median income, while home prices today seem badly out of whack at between 4.7 and 11.3 times this measure.

But maybe that’s because the yardstick is out of whack. Lefebvre of the Conference Board wouldn’t dream of using this measure.

That’s because it doesn’t take into account the huge impact of mortgage interest rates, which have varied greatly over the years, directly affecting people’s ability to pay for a home.

At today’s low mortgage interest rates, housing affordability is pretty good in most Canadian markets, Lefebvre said, and he’s not too worried about a rise in interest rates, since rates are rising only gradually.

As well, he said, Macdonald’s concern that home prices have risen faster than incomes over the past decade overlooks a crucial fact: that home prices lagged badly during the previous decade.

Robert Hogue, a senior economist at the Royal Bank of Canada, has worked out the numbers on affordability in some detail, and his conclusion is essentially the same as Lefebvre’s: there’s no bubble today and little prospect of significant price declines tomorrow.

Hogue suggests that a possible exception is Vancouver, where prices are sky-high, and maybe Montreal, where prices are still fairly low, but have shot up rapidly in recent years.

While it’s true that interest rates will put a little more stress on homeowners over the next year or two, Hogue simulated this by calculating the impact of adding 1.5% to today’s mortgage rates. He found little cause for concern.

His finding: affordability would deteriorate only moderately, with home ownership costs representing about 46% of median income for a typical bungalow, up from 41% today.

This would still fall far short of the 54% home ownership burden that helped spur a severe housing bust in 1990. And the 46% estimate is probably high, since rising Canadian incomes will partly offset rising interest rates.

————————————————————————————————————–

Contact the Jeffrey Team for more information  -  416-388-1960

————————————————————————————————————–

Incoming search terms for the article: