Toronto real estate market ‘the hottest:’ BMO
Toronto “is starting to stand out as the hottest real estate market
right now,” following the release of December sales figures, BMO Nesbitt
Burns economist Robert Kavcic says.
However, that may be somewhat
of a booby prize, as the Canadian market, following a 13-year boom, is
cooling overall – and Toronto is expected to follow suit, he added.
The Toronto Real Estate Board said Thursday that Greater Toronto real
estate agents reported 4,718 sales in December, up 10.1 per cent from
the same period in 2010. The average selling price was $451,436, up 4
per cent year over year.
That capped off the second-best year on
record under the board’s current boundaries, dating to 1994. “Low
borrowing costs kept buyers confident in their ability to comfortably
cover their mortgage payments along with other major housing costs,”
board president Richard Silver said in a release. The board said buyers
were held back by a shortage of listings, while tight market conditions
kept upward pressure on selling prices.
It’s a different story in
Vancouver, where the number of residential sales in December tumbled by
12.7 per cent over the same period a year earlier, according to figures
released this week by the Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver. Sales
for 2011 were 5.9 per cent above 2010 levels but 9.2 per cent below
2009. The overall residential benchmark price, as measured by the
MLSLink Housing Price Index, has also dropped by 1.5 per cent since
June.
Earlier this week, TD senior economist Jacques Marcil
predicted both B.C. and Ontario could face challenging housing markets
over the next two years.
Mr. Kavcic said the ratio of sales to new
listings in Toronto and throughout Ontario “is pretty much in line with
historical norms,” but noted that the number of starts for new
multiple-unit dwellings (largely condos) in Ontario over the past 12
months had outpaced single family homes by a factor of 1.5 to 1, up from
a ratio of close to 1 to 1 over the past decade and “pretty well the
largest discrepancy we’ve seen in a long time.”
As a result, “to the extent where there is downward pressure on prices, the condo market is more at risk” in Toronto, he said.
Merrill
Lynch warned last month that housing prices could correct by as much as
10 per cent in the next two years in Canada because of weakness in the
economy, expressing particular concern about Toronto’s condo market. The
Bank of Canada also warned the Toronto market looks overbuilt and could
see prices drop.
source: globe and mail