TORONTO -- The Canadian Real Estate Association said national home
sales sank 13.9 per cent year-over-year to the lowest level in more than
five years in April, just as the number of newly-listed homes fell to a
nine-year low for the month.
The decreases amount to a 2.9 per cent drop in sales between March
and April, bringing the total to 36,297. During that same time listings
fell to 67,616, taking a 4.8 per cent hit -- a sign that the flurry of
activity that usually kicks off the spring real estate market has failed
to materialize.
CREA attributed the subdued level of activity to the stricter
regulations for uninsured mortgages that the Office of the
Superintendent of Financial Institutions introduced on Jan. 1. Its
president Barb Sukkau said the regulations have "cast its shadow over
sales activity," while its chief economist blamed them for having
"destabilized market balance for housing markets in Alberta,
Saskatchewan and Newfoundland."
CREA said 60 per cent of all local markets were balanced in April,
but that sales were down in 60 per cent of all markets, led by the
Fraser Valley, Calgary, Ottawa and Montreal.
Similarly, activity was below year-ago levels in about 60 per cent of
all markets, which was "overwhelmingly" led by B.C.'s lower mainland
and markets in and around Ontario's Greater Golden Horseshoe region.
CREA also said the country has experienced a decrease in the
non-seasonally adjusted national average sale price, which dropped by
11.3 per cent year-over-year last month to just over $495,000.
That number is well below the April averages for markets in B.C. and
Ontario that overheated last year, causing both provinces to spring into
action to cool the sector. B.C.'s most recent budget introduced a
speculation tax targeting both foreign and domestic buyers not paying
tax in the province. Last April, the Ontario government aimed to quell
its roaring markets with expanded rent controls, a plan to ensure
property tax parity for new apartment buildings and legislation that
would allow Toronto and other municipalities to implement a vacant homes
tax.
Following those measures, CREA said April's non-seasonally adjusted
average home price in Greater Vancouver was just above $1 million, in
Toronto it was $804,584, in the Fraser Valley it was $780,736 and in
Victoria it hit $703,592.
Those numbers were much higher than those experienced in Newfoundland
and Labrador, Saint John, Sherbrooke, Saguenay, Quebec, Gatineau and
Windsor-Essex markets, where the average home price in April hovered
between $200,000 and $300,000.
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