According
to statistics released today by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA),
national home sales posted a month-over-month increase in August 2013.
Highlights:
·
National home
sales rose 2.8% from July to August.
·
Actual (not
seasonally adjusted) activity came in 11.1% above levels in August 2012.
·
The number of
newly listed homes was up 1.8% from July to August.
·
The Canadian
housing market has tightened but remains in balanced territory.
·
The national
average sale price rose 8.1% on a year-over-year basis in August.
·
The MLS® Home
Price Index (HPI) rose 2.9% year-over-year in August.
The number of home sales
processed through the MLS® Systems of Canadian real estate Boards and
Associations and other co-operative listing systems rose 2.8 per cent on a
month-over-month basis in August 2013. The number of local markets where sales
improved on a month-over-month basis ran roughly even with those where activity
edged lower in August, with increases in major urban centres tipping the
balance.
“All real estate is truly
local, but sometimes sales trends can change similarly in a large number of
markets at the same time due to factors that can affect all markets across
Canada,” said CREA President Laura Leyser. “The recent hike in fixed mortgage
rates is one example of an influence that affects all markets, but it’s just
one of many things that shape housing market trends. Your local REALTOR®
remains the best resource for understanding what’s driving the housing market
where you live or might like to.”
Actual (not seasonally
adjusted) activity came in 11.1 per cent ahead of levels reported in August
2012 to run roughly in line with its 10-year average. Sales were up on a
year-over-year basis in about two-thirds of local markets, led by double-digit
gains in Vancouver Island, Victoria, Greater Vancouver, the Fraser Valley,
Calgary, Edmonton and Greater Toronto.
“Sales activity dropped
sharply around this time last year in the wake of tightened mortgage rules and
has improved since then, so a sizeable year-over-year increase this August was
expected,” said Gregory Klump, CREA’s Chief Economist. “Buyers who put off
purchase decisions or who were otherwise sidelined by tighter mortgage rules
and lending guidelines implemented last year were anticipated to return to the
housing market. That said, the upward trend and levels for activity in recent
months has been steeper than expected, but that may not last.”
“Recent increases to fixed
mortgage rates caused sales to be pulled forward as buyers with pre-approved
financing at lower rates jumped into the market sooner than they might have
otherwise,” Klump added. “That pool of homebuyers has largely evaporated so demand
may soften over the fourth quarter. The outsized year-over-year gains may
persist, however, due to weak sales toward the end of last year.”
Some 325,180 homes have
traded hands across the country so far this year. That stands 2.9 per cent
below levels recorded in the first eight months of 2012. Notwithstanding the
recent upward trend in demand, CREA still expects the 2013 annual sales figure
to come in below the 2012 figure.
The number of newly listed
homes rose 1.8 per cent on a month-over-month basis in August. Slightly more
than half of all local markets recorded gains. As with sales activity, that
list includes many of Canada’s most active housing markets.
With sales activity having
risen by slightly more than new listings in August, the national sales-to-new
listings ratio edged up to 54.6 per cent compared to 54.1 per cent in July.
While the national housing market has firmed slightly in recent months, it
remains firmly rooted in balanced market territory where it has been since
early 2010.
Based on a sales-to-new
listings ratio of between 40 to 60 per cent, a record 73 per cent of all local
markets were in balanced market territory in August.
The number of months of
inventory is another important measure of balance between housing supply and
demand. It represents the number of months it would take to completely
liquidate current inventories at the current rate of sales activity. There were
5.9 months of inventory at the national level at the end of August, down from
6.1 months one month earlier. As with the sales-to-new listings ratio, the
current months of inventory measure marks a slightly firmer but still well
balanced market.
The actual (not seasonally
adjusted) national average price for homes sold in August 2013 was $378,369, an
increase of 8.1 per cent from the same month last year. Year-over-year average
price gains in recent months reflect outsized sales declines last year among
some of Canada’s larger and more expensive markets as a proportion of national
activity. For example, Greater Vancouver’s long-term (10 year) average
proportion of national activity is 7.4 per cent on an unadjusted basis but it
had fallen to 4.6 per cent in August 2012. Since then, it has rebounded and now
stands at 6.3 per cent - its second-highest level in the past year.
If Greater Toronto and
Greater Vancouver are removed from the national average price calculation, the
year-over-year increase is cut from 8.1 per cent to 4.8 per cent. A better
gauge of what’s going on with prices is the MLS® Home Price Index (MLS® HPI),
which is not affected by changes in the mix of sales the way that average price
is.
The Aggregate Composite
MLS® HPI rose 2.92 per cent compared to August 2012, up from 2.66 per cent in
July. That said, year-over-year growth in the price index has slowed since late
2011 and has ranged between two and three per cent for the past seven months.
Year-over-year price
growth picked up among all property types tracked by the index. One-storey and
two-storey single family homes saw year-over-year price gains of 3.45 per cent
and 3.61 per cent respectively in August. Year-over-year price growth for
townhouse/row and apartment units remains more modest, with these segments
recording gains of 1.85 per cent and 1.25 per cent respectively in August.
Year-over-year price
growth in the MLS® HPI was mixed across the markets tracked by the index.
Copyright CREA - reprinted with permission
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