Tag Archive for Canadian Real Estate Association

Despite stress, no crash seen in housing

Steve Ladurantaye – Globe and Mail

The Canadian housing market is showing several serious signs of stress, but Bank of America Merrill Lynch says there’s no reason to believe values are set for a sharp dive.

“Valuation metrics are clearly stretched, but the usual symptoms of a tipping point are simply not there,” according to a report authored by economists Sheryl King and Ryan Bohren.

“Speculation is low, price expectations are cautious, home building is not excessive and most importantly the economy continues to expand steadily.”

The resale housing market has been strong through the first half of the year.

The Canadian Real Estate Association will release its national resale numbers for February Tuesday, and is expected to show stronger than usual activity as buyers continued to take advantage of record low interest rates.

(There are also some who believe buyers bought in February to secure 35-year amortizations on their mortgages, which are no longer available as of mid-March.)

The report said the structure of the Canadian mortgage market makes a U.S.-style crash unlikely, and listed four key reasons the market is unlikely to tank:

* Mortgage insurance is explicitly guaranteed in Canada, limiting bank exposure to higher risk borrowers.
* Recourse laws mean fewer borrowers walk away from mortgages.
* Thirty per cent of mortgage funding is government backed, providing a stable and liquid source of financing.
* Canadians are “relatively conservative, with leverage ratios only just matching the levels of a significantly deleveraged U.S. household.”

The report also outlined reasons Canadians should be concerned about rising prices (don’t worry, a list of reasons why not to worry follows):

* Canadian home valuations look stretched, with “the average estimated asking rental yield at all time lows. Housing affordability looks relatively good, but will likely to decline as mortgage rates are set to rise and lending rules are tightening.”
* Canadian home ownership rates are near record highs of close to 70 per cent, and real estate assets are near a record 38 per cent of household assets.
* Canadian mortgage-debt-to-disposable-income reached a record high of 93 per cent (similar to the U.S.).

As promised there are three reasons to believe the market won’t crash:

Canadian home sales as a percentage of housing stock remains below the 10-year average, “suggesting the turnover is not excessively speculative.”

Housing starts in 2009 and 2010 have averaged around 160,000, “just below the natural formation rate of around 170,000.”

“Most importantly – economic conditions in Canada continue to improve. The employment levels are above pre-recession levels, wages are growing and financial conditions remain very easy.”

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It’s still growth, but it’s a tad slower

Reuters

The Canadian Real Estate Association cut its 2010 forecast for resale house prices and sales, saying sales in British Columbia were not as strong as expected at the start of the year.

The industry group said it now expects the average price to climb 1.6% to $325,400 nationally in 2010, a big drop from its previous forecast of a 5.4% gain.

Sales are seen rising 5.5% to 490,600 units in 2010. In February, CREA forecast sales of 527,300 units in 2010, up 13.3% from 2009.

The group said a decline in affordability in British Columbia hurt sales in the province during the first quarter, although sales in Ontario were much as expected.

“Lower expected activity in British Columbia accounts for more than half of the downward revision in national sales activity,” the group said.

CREA said it now expects sales in B.C. to fall 5.9% this year to 80,000 units from 85,028 in 2009, while prices there are seen up 2.3% at $476,400.

It expects Ontario sales to rise 10% to 215,400 units, a record but a smaller gain than previously thought. Prices are seen to increase 3.9% to $330,900.

The association had expected to see stronger sales in the first half of the year, ahead of the introduction of new mortgage rules, rising interest rates and new sales tax regimes in Ontario and British Columbia.

Month-to-month home resales have been cooling from the beginning of the year, while listings have been rising, quieting a feisty debate that a bubble was forming.

The real estate association repeated Wednesday it did not see a U.S.-style housing price correction, mostly because of solid mortgage market trends.

The Bank of Canada raised interest rates for the first time in three years this week, bringing its benchmark overnight rate up a quarter point to 0.5%.

For 2011, CREA forecasts an 8.5% slide in sales to 448,700 units, with every province except Newfoundland and Labrador to post declines from this year. An earlier forecast pegged the slide at 7.1%.

The average national price is seen slipping 2.2% to $318,300, compared with an earlier view of a 1.5% decline.

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Home sellers rush to market in record numbers

The Canadian Real Estate Association said Thursday that 97,663 homes were listed for sale across the country in March, a 20% increase from the same period in 2008

Garry Marr, Financial Post

Realtors pounded a record number of for sale signs into Canadian lawns last month, something that is expected to cool down the red hot housing market, the Canadian Real Estate Association said.

The Ottawa-based group, which represents more than 100 boards across the country, said there were 97,663 new listings in March, up 25% from a year earlier. For the first quarter, 233,402 new listings have hit the market — the highest for any first quarter on record.

“Negotiations still favour sellers during the home buying process in a number of major Canadian housing markets,” Georges Pahud, CREA’s president. “The rise in new listings means that buyers may shop around more before making an offer.”

Demand has come down slightly. There were 130,072 seasonally adjusted home sales on the first quarter, a 3.4% decline from a quarter ago but still a 46.7% increase from a year earlier.

New records for sale activity were set in Ontario, Quebec and

Newfoundland in the first quarter. However, units sales declined in British Columbia 16.7% from the fourth quarter and in Alberta 9.7%.

Prices also continue to rise, albeit at a slower pace. The average price of a home sold across the country reached $340,920 last month, a 17.6% increase from a year earleir and just $300 off the all-time peak touched in October, 2009.

Even with the strong number of new listings, home listed for sale across the multiple listing service were down 9% March from a year ago.

The number of months of inventory in the system, based on the present pace of actual sales, was 4.4 months in March. That figure was down from 6.7 months a year earlier.

“The erosion of housing affordability is crimping activity in some of Canada’s priciest markets in the lower mainland

of British Columbia,” said CREA chief economist Gregory Klump. “Higher mortgage interest rates and the rise in new listings may also soon reduce some of the urgency to purchase in

Toronto. Sales activity in British Columbia and Ontario is expected to ease over the second half of 2010 once the

HST comes into effect, pulling national activity lower. Rising supply and lower activity will take the steam out of the pricing environment following upbeat home sales this spring.”

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