Posts Tagged ‘Real’

Resale housing across Canada and in major cities like Toronto, Calgary and Vancouver are all reporting increased sales from just a few months prior. This change is right across Canada even in smaller cities however the average price is being driven up by some of the more pricier real estate markets.

OTTAWA – June 15th, 2009 – National resale housing market activity returned to pre-recession levels in May 2009. The rebound in activity is being led by an increase in transactions in some of the most expensive markets in the country, which is skewing the national average price upward.

According to statistics released by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), actual (not seasonally adjusted) home sales via the Multiple Listing Service® (MLS®) of Canadian real estate boards totaled 49,521 units in May 2009. This is less than one per cent below activity in the same month one year ago. Year-over-year declines have been shrinking since the beginning of the year.

The seasonal increase in activity continues to be stronger than normal. As a result, seasonally adjusted home sales rose eight per cent to 37,649 units in May compared to April. This marks the fourth consecutive monthly increase in seasonally adjusted activity. Seasonally adjusted activity in May was 43 per cent above where it stood in January 2009.

Seasonally adjusted sales were up on a monthly basis in about 70 per cent of local markets. Monthly activity gains in Toronto (nine per cent), Calgary (25 per cent), Montreal (10 per cent), Vancouver (eight per cent), and Edmonton (12 per cent) contributed most to the overall increase in monthly activity.

The national MLS® residential average sale price in May 2009 reached the highest monthly level on record. At $319,757, it was up fourth tenths of a percentage point from the previous record set in May 2008. Over the past four months, the national MLS® residential average price has recovered 16.4 per cent from the low in January. The average price for MLS® home sales climbed to new heights nationally, and in Saskatchewan, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. New records were posted in only 15 per cent of local markets in May, none of which are among the most active or expensive. The strong rebound in sales activity, not price, in Canada’s most expensive markets is driving up average prices nationally and in some provinces, just as a sharp decline in activity in these markets pushed average prices lower in late 2008.

The supply of homes coming onto the MLS® market continued to decelerate in May. Seasonally adjusted MLS® residential new listings edged lower by eight tenths of a percentage point to 65,070 units, the lowest level since December 2005. Seasonally adjusted new residential listings in May were 19 per cent below the peak reached one year ago.

With the number of sales rising strongly and new listings trending downward, the balance between supply and demand is firming up in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario, and Quebec. This resulted in national sales activity as a percentage of new listings reaching the highest point since December 2007. Residential dollar volume for MLS® sales climbed 10 per cent from the previous month to reach $11.4 billion in May. This is more than 50 per cent above the low of $7.5 billion reported last January.

“Sales activity is now closer to the pre-recession peak than it is to the recent low point reached last January,” says Regina Broker Dale Ripplinger, President of The Canadian Real Estate Association. “Strengthening consumer confidence, low interest rates, and improved affordability are drawing buyers to the housing market across Canada,” he added.

“Fueled by a string of monthly increases in activity, the number of transactions in May reached the highest point since July 2008,” said CREA Chief Economist Gregory Klump. “Inventory levels are still high in many markets, but fewer new listings and rising sales activity suggests that the selection of homes available for sale may shrink as the year progresses. The supply of homes up for sale needs to be drawn down further before average price increases become more widespread among local markets.”

PLEASE NOTE: The information contained in this news release combines both major market and national MLS® sales information from the previous month. The Canadian Real Estate Association has previously released these separately.

CREA cautions that average price information can be useful in establishing trends over time, but does not indicate actual prices in centres comprised of widely divergent neighborhoods or account for price differential between geographic areas. Statistical information contained in this report includes all housing types.

MLS® is a co-operative marketing system used only by Canada’s real estate Boards to ensure maximum exposure of properties listed for sale.

The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) is one of Canada’s largest single-industry trade associations, representing more than 96,000 REALTORS® working through more than 100 real estate Boards and Associations. Further information can be found at www.crea.ca

“Good news for the market in ON”, – Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

this article from Ottawa citizen brought by Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO

A record-breaking number of homes were sold in Ottawa last month, up 3.9 per cent from May 2008, and for more money.

The Ottawa Real Estate Board said 1,969 residential properties were sold in May, compared to 1,896 a year ago. The May figure is a 19-per-cent increase from a month ago.

The average sale price of homes sold last month was $312,045, an increase of 5.3 per cent from May 2008.

Ottawa Real Estate Board president Rick Snell said the news is wonderful considering Canada’s turbulent economic climate.

“And it’s great for the Ottawa economy,” he said, “because every time there’s a sale, it generates all kinds of business throughout the Ottawa economy. People move, they buy furniture, they buy appliances, they decorate, they renovate.”

The fact that Ottawans enjoy the benefits of living in a real estate bubble is not news. With stable government employment and a highly educated population enjoying steady incomes for the most part, the city’s May figures don’t surprise the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC).

“We have a very stable market in Ottawa,” CMHC senior Ottawa market analyst Sandra Pérez Torres said Wednesday. “Year-to-date employment shows positive numbers. We have, until April 2009, a 0.1 per cent increase, so despite the fact that some sectors have decreases from last year — such as in trade, manufacturing, transportation — public administration and services are picking up the slack.”

“Even construction employment has increased significantly from last year.”

Pérez Torres said consumers are also continuing to take advantage of low interest rates.

“There are other, smaller regions in Ontario like Thunder Bay, for example, which is showing positive numbers as well. But in general, when we compare with the bigger picture, Ottawa is one of the best ones, showing a very, very positive outlook.”

The May numbers are in keeping with 2009 Ottawa real estate market projections released in December, in which RE/MAX and CMHC predicted a slight rise in prices and no drastic decline in home sales.

Ottawa is becoming more of a sellers’ market, Pérez Torres added. The trend began in April, and she predicts it will continue over the summer. Traditionally, Snell said, the market peaks in May and June before beginning a gradual decline into the fall.

http://www.ottawacitizen.com/Business/merry+month+Ottawa+home+sellers/1660731/story.html

By Brian Madigan LL.B.

The Toronto Real Estate Board has just released its May statistics. Both sales and prices are up.

There were 9,589 sales in the GTA in May 2009. That’s about 2% higher than May 2008.

The height of the market in terms of price was actually April 2008, when the average price of a single family home in the GTA reached $398,687. In May, the average price climbed back to $395,609; that’s just 0.77% less than the all time high. In fact, it may not be statistically significant.

This certainly dispels the notion that it’s a buyers market and prices are going to drop by 50%. That was just pure speculation by some optimistic, would-be buyers who failed to follow the monthly trends. It was also a popular topic in the media.

This is a full and complete recovery. There has been a transition from a buyers’ market, earlier in the year, to a balanced market, which is where we find ourselves now.

There are several factors that contribute to the recovery:

o Interest rates are at 50 year lows
o The Bank of Canada prime rate sits at 0.25%
o There is a reasonable supply of product
o Buyers have returned to the marketplace
o There is a good deal of consumer optimism
o The stock markets have rebounded about 50% from their lows

If this trend continues, you will also find that market prices will increase. This will be due to:

o better product availability, and
o the true cost of ownership.

In a buyers’ market, sellers with good product just don’t enter the marketplace unless they have to. If they can wait, they will wait. So, rarely is there a good property that buyers’ will stretch for. However, in a balanced market or a sellers’ market, buyers will stretch their finances to acquire premium products.

Also, the true cost of ownership has dropped. While the prices are now the same as last year, mortgage rates have declined by 40% to 50%. Effectively, if you were to fully mortgage a property, the long term cost has declined measurably. So, a $500,000 property today costs a lot less than a $500,000 property one year ago.

If you have a job, and you can borrow money, this is the time to buy!

Brian Madigan LL.B., Realtor is an author and commentator on real estate matters, Royal LePage Innovators Realty
905-796-8888

http://ontariorealestatesource.blogspot.com/2009/06/toronto-total-market-recovery.html

It was a reporot from Moishe Alexander, CFC CEO