Posts Tagged ‘measure’

Posted by Moishe Alexander

After two years of sharp declines, and coming off from a decade of annual housing starts largely above demographic needs, new housing construction is set to stabilize in 2009. Amid emerging positive signs in both the economic and financial fronts, total residential construction in the Kingston Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) will rise by 5.2 per cent this year, with 707 new starts.

In addition to the boost to homeownership demand due to low interest rates, the prospects for increased spill-over demand from a recovering resale market will likely result in a faster year-over-year pace of starts during the first half of 2010. As a result, total starts next year will reach 690 units for a slight 2.4 per cent decrease, thus stabilizing construction activity at a pace more in line with household formation.

Coming off from a historically challenging economic environment, the short-term forecast for Kingston’s residential construction industry remains for the most part optimistic. The substantial monetary easing and fiscal stimulus measures in Canada’s Economic Action Plan will improve economic fundamentals. This will renew household’s appetite for big-ticket items in the face of low interest rates.

While spill-over demand from the resale into the new home market typically takes time to fully materialize, Kingston’s new home market looks ripe for a modest recovery. First, new listings for resale have declined substantially from last year, thus lowering supply competition. Second, the level of unabsorbed new home inventories has returned below the long-term average. Finally, the year- to-date pipeline of properties under construction is substantially lower than for the same period last year, which means that there are resources available for future projects.

Posted by Moishe Alexander

Following a 56 per cent decline in 2008, total housing starts across the Edmonton Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) are on pace to decrease by another 24 per cent this year to 5,000 units. This will represent the lowest level of activity for the region’s home builders since 1997. While single- detached construction has staged a modest recovery since the summer, a continued downturn in the multi- family sector will hold down this year’s numbers. In 2010, a sustained improvement in single starts combined with a moderate rebound in multiples will boost total starts by 29 per cent to 6,450 units. While representing a sizable gain over this year’s volumes, total starts next year remain a fraction of the 10,600+ units started on average during the 10 year period 1999-to-2008.

Single-detached starts increased by 14 per cent during the first nine months of 2009 but the improvements have come on gradually as the year has progressed. Activity levels were down by 39 per cent year-over-year at the end of the first quarter but have generally exceeded last year’s production since then. Price reductions, various incentives, and low mortgage rates have helped to bolster demand in 2009. This trend should continue for the balance of 2009, with annual production nearing the 3,200 unit mark. This will represent an increase of 22.5 per cent over 2008 but will still be well below activity levels reported over the past decade. Look for these gains to continue in 2010, with single starts of around 4,200 units. The tepid outlook for employment growth will temper the rate of increase going into 2010. Inventory levels, including show homes, peaked in August 2008 and have been trending downward throughout much of the past year. As shown in Figure 2, the show home component of inventory has started to move upward as builders ramp-up marketing efforts. The inventory of complete and unabsorbed spec homes, meanwhile, has trended to its lowest levels since September 2006.

Statistics Canada’s New House Price Index (NHPI) is forecasted by CMHC to decrease by 10.5 per cent this year before staging a two per cent improvement in 2010. These price changes have begun to show up in CMHC’s market absorption surveys but the overall average absorbed price has held up surprising well in 2009. To the end of August, the average absorbed price increased this year nine per cent to $545,327. While units priced under $400,000 and over $600,000 have gained market share this year, mid-range product selling between $400-600,000 lost ground compared with last year.

CMHC forecasts an average absorbed single-detached price this year of close to $535,000, for a 4.5 per cent gain over 2008. The expected median value will be much lower as the impact of high-priced homes is less using this measure. In 2010, the absorbed average price will soften due to the lagged effect of when homes are priced (often before construction begins) and when they are captured in our survey (which is at completion). The pressure for higher negotiated selling prices will come from builders who had trimmed their margins over the past year in order to clear their unsold inventory. With better economic times ahead, land and labour costs as well as material prices such as lumber and concrete are expected to increase.

Posted by Moioshe Alexander

A gradual recovery of the economy and improvement in labour market conditions will underlie a 14 per cent pick-up in housing starts forecast for the St. Catharines-Niagara CMA (hereinafter Niagara) in 2010. Housing starts will increase to 950 units from estimated 830 units in 2009 as empty-nester demand, low inventories
and low mortgage rates boost new construction in 2010.

The household formation rate, a key determinant of housing demand, has slowed given the more challenging economic climate. Moving forward, it will continue to be slow because of demographic factors, most notably the aging population. The slowing household formation rate will limit the potential for starts in the region in the medium term.

In 2010, builders will break ground on as many single-detached homes as in 2009. Growth next year is expected to be led by starts of townhouses. This will be due to demand from downsizing empty-nesters who will continue to be looking for bungalow townhouse condominiums. A typical profile of townhouses that are becoming increasingly popular with senior households is a one and a half storey two-bedroom home with about 1,500 sq. ft. These homes often have an open concept design, with a master bedroom, and a large kitchen and living room area on the main floor. However, some empty-nesters are finding it difficult to sell their current homes. The cohort of current move-up households (the baby-bust generation born between the mid 1960s to the late 1970s), which includes the prospective buyers of these homes, is relatively small. Also, their housing requirements are different from the needs of the current empty-nesters when they were move-up buyers 20 to 30 years ago. Consequently, some empty-nesters will be unable to sell at a price that allows them to buy the housing they prefer without additional financing and may opt to stay in their current home. Some choosing this option will also renovate. Retirees moving into the region, traditionally from the GTA, will buy many of the bungalow townhouse condos being built. Proceeds from the sale of their home will enable them to afford a new home in Niagara.

Despite lower new home demand in the late 2008 and early 2009, there was almost no build-up in inventories of unsold completed homes. Builders matched production to the lower demand, which was very different than the experience in the 1991 downturn. Entering 2010 with low inventory will mean that builders will respond to any increase in demand for new homes with increased production. As economy recovers, the currently well-supplied resale market will no longer offer a lot of choice or be sufficient to satiate housing demand. The new home market will feel a positive spill-over effect from the resale market. Also, relatively low mortgage rates expected to move up only slightly in 2010 which will create an environment that is supportive for rising housing demand next year.

Increasing costs of land and development charges will bump up the price of new homes especially in the northern municipalities of Niagara peninsula. The New Home Price Index (NHPI) for Niagara, which measures the prices at which builders sell new homes of equivalent quality, is projected to reverse and trend up modestly, after falling through most of 2009.