Nelson BC real estate blog by Robert Goertz of Valhalla Path Realty. Keeping you up to date with the Nelson and West Kootenay real estate markets.
Monday, January 20, 2014
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Home sales up 13% in December from year ago, down for month
The number of existing homes that changed hands in Canada
in December was nearly 13-per-cent higher than a year earlier, but slipped from
the prior month for the third time in a row.
Sales over the Multiple Listing Service last month were
1.8-per-cent lower than in November on a seasonally-adjusted basis, according
to the Canadian Real Estate Association, which represents the majority of real
estate agents in Canada. They have been declining month-to-month since
September.
But the 12.9-per-cent year-over-year increase exceeded
expectations of some economists. Bank of Montreal’s Sal Guatieri had been
looking for a 7-per-cent gain from December 2012. About 70 per cent of all
Canadian markets had more sales last month than they had a year earlier, with
the strongest gains coming from Vancouver, the Fraser Valley, Calgary,
Edmonton, Toronto and the Hamilton-Burlington area.
The average price of homes that sold over the MLS,
meanwhile, was up by 10.4 per cent from a year earlier to $389,119. Averages
can be distorted by changes in the location or size of homes that are selling,
and the real estate association says that most of the increase was driven by
the rebounding markets of Vancouver and Toronto. When those two cities are removed,
the average increased by only 4.6 per cent.
The MLS Home Price Index, which attempts to create a more
apples-to-apples national comparison, was up 4.3 per cent. That’s a slight
acceleration in price growth from the 4.11 per cent annual gain registered in
November.
The number of homes that changed hands during all of
2013, at 457,893, was 0.8 per cent higher than in 2012. At the start of 2013,
economists were expecting home sales to drop from the prior year, as the market
was still in the midst of a slump that began after Finance Minister Jim
Flaherty tightened mortgage insurance rules in the summer of 2012.
If the government doesn’t tighten rules further, then
this year’s sales could surpass those of 2013, assuming demand holds steady and
that a strengthening economy and job gains offset expected small increases in
mortgage rates, said CREA’s chief economist Gregory Klump.
On a month-to-month basis, sales were down in about 60
per cent of local markets, including Calgary, Edmonton and Toronto, CREA said.
The number of new listings, which was down 4.3 per cent
from November, fell further than sales, pushing the sales-to-new listings ratio
to 55 per cent from 53.6 per cent.
“This indicates a slightly firmer housing market but
remains well within balanced territory marked by the range from 40 to 60 per
cent, as has been the case since early 2010,” CREA said.
TARA PERKINS - REAL ESTATE
REPORTER
The Globe and Mail
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Monday, January 13, 2014
BC Home Sales Bounce Back in 2013
The British Columbia Real Estate Association (BCREA)
reports that a total of 72,936 residential sales were recorded by the Multiple
Listing Service® (MLS®) in BC during 2013, up 7.8 per cent from 2012. The
five-year average is 75,400 units, while the ten-year average is 84,800 units.
Total sales dollar volume was $39.2 billion, an increase of 12.6 per cent
compared to 2012. The average annual MLS® residential price in the province
rose to $537,414 last year, up 4.4 per cent from 2012.
"After declining nearly 12 per cent in 2012, home
sales posted steady growth through last year,” said Cameron Muir, BCREA Chief
Economist. “Greater Vancouver, Kamloops and Okanagan Mainline board areas
posted the most significant changes, with home sales rising between 12.5 and 14
per cent. Stronger consumer demand combined with fewer homes listed for sale
improved market conditions in most regions last year."
In December, BC residential unit sales rose 47 per cent
to 4,426 units, compared to December 2012. Total dollar volume was 67.7 per
cent higher at $2.5 billion, while the average MLS® residential price rose 14.1
per cent to $568,416.
"Large year-over-year changes in December reflect
relatively weak activity the previous year rather than evidence of an accelerating
market,” added Muir.
Copyright BCREA – reprinted with permission
Canadian and US Employment
The Canadian economy finished the year on a weak note
with total employment falling by 46,000 jobs in December. Those job losses
pushed the Canadian unemployment higher by 0.3 points to 7.2 per cent. For all
of 2013, employment growth averaged a mediocre 8,500 jobs per month and total
employment expanded 1.3 per cent over 2012. Weak job growth and very low
inflation in the Canadian economy should further erode any remaining
rate-tightening bias at the Bank of Canada.
In BC, employment growth finished the year on a more
positive note, with 12,500 new jobs. Unfortunately, job gains were isolated to
part-time work and the province continued to lose full-time jobs. The
provincial unemployment rate fell 0.1 points to 6.6 per cent. Total employment
finished 2013 down 0.2 per cent from 2012.
In the United States, jobs gains missed markedly to the
downside, posting just 74,000 new jobs versus expectations of 200,000. Despite
weak job growth in December, the US unemployment rate fell to a five-year low
of 6.7 per cent as a result of fewer people actively looking for work. However,
monthly non-farm payrolls have averaged a relatively robust 174,000 jobs over
the past three months which may provide a better guide to the underlying trend
in unemployment.
Copyright BCREA – reprinted with permission
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Canadian Housing Starts
Canadian housing starts declined in December from 197,797
units at a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) to 189,672 units SAAR. A decline of 4.2 per cent. The trend in Canadian new home construction
also declined slightly to 195,760 units SAAR over the past six months, a rate
that is slightly higher than demographic demand suggests is needed. For all of 2013, Canadian housing starts in
urban centres were down 12 per cent compared to 2012.
New home construction in BC urban centres increased 14.5
per cent in December to 30,886 units SAAR. A ramp-up in new home construction
to end the year pushed total starts for 2013 higher by 1 per cent compared with
2012 at 25,685 units. Single family units finished the year up 8 per cent while
multiple unit starts declined 2 per cent.
Looking at census metropolitan areas (CMA) in BC, total
starts in the Vancouver CMA jumped 47 per cent year-over-year in December to
finish 2013 at 18,696 units, a decline of 1 per cent over last year. In the Victoria CMA, total starts were nearly
quadruple that of December 2012 and finished the year down 1 per cent at 1,685
units. New home construction in the Kelowna CMA were up 59 per cent in December
and posted 1,013 total starts in 2013, the first time since the 2008/09
recession that Kelowna new home construction has cleared the 1000 start
threshold. Housing starts also posted large
gains in the Abbotsford-Mission CMA in December. New home construction doubled
in that area in 2013 at 749 total starts.
Copyright BCREA – reprinted with permission
Nelson Single Family Home Sales Stats 2013
According to statistics provided by the Kootenay Real Estate Board, over the past year we had a 15% reduction in the number of single family home sales in Nelson and the average price is down 6%.
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