Posts Tagged ‘Moshe Alexander A’

Posted by Moshe Alexander

A number of factors have exerted upward pressure on Sudbury’s vacancy rate. Between October 2008 and October 2009, employment in the mining and related service sector has fallen. The challenges facing global demand for stainless steel have impacted Sudbury’s nickel industry and services related specifically to this sector. While the latest migration results (2007-2008) for Sudbury CMA showed positive net in-migration for the sixth consecutive year, it is more likely that in-migration slowed as well since last fall due to less investment spending in the mining industry. Some of these residents affected by the changing fortunes of the nickel market, may have left Sudbury to find work causing the vacancy rate to rise if they resided in rental housing. Meanwhile, a slowing job market triggered less renter household formation, particularly among the core renter group of young adults aged 18-24, resulting in more young adults remaining in the parental home.

Another factor dampening rental demand has been the shift to homeownership. An improvement of homeownership affordability caused by falling interest rates has prompted some renters to become homeowners over the past year. Although overall sales are lower, affordable priced product is moving well suggesting first time buyers are active.

With the total stock increasing only marginally over the course of the year, changes in the vacancy rate are attributable to changes in rental market demand, rather than fluctuations in supply. There is only a slight change in the rental universe observed between October 2008 and 2009 underlining the lack of new supply or changes to the stock of rental units (See Table 1.1.3). There have been only 58 rental completions in the last ten years according to CMHC’s survey in Greater Sudbury, with 31 coming last year. While the overall vacancy rate climbed to 2.9 per cent, both one bedroom and two bedroom units saw vacancy rates rise by a similar magnitude. Sudbury’s one bedroom stock saw its vacancy rate rise to 2.8 cent from 0.9 per cent while the two bed apartment stock jumped to 2.5 per cent compared to 0.4 per cent last year. Units in direct competition with homeownership saw an increase in vacancy rates as young couples and/or unattached singles move from rental units into homeownership or leave the community altogether.