Strong market means house prices to rise in major cities, realtor says

Canada’s housing market will continue to be strong this year, with rising property values expected in all major markets, real estate brokerage firm Royal LePage said Thursday.

The company’s forecast called for prices across to country to rise 2.8 per cent by the end of 2012, after stronger gains last year.

Even pricey housing markets in Metro Vancouver and Toronto – where standard two-storey homes averaged $1.1 million and $629,188, respectively, in the last quarter – will see continued price appreciation in 2012, though the gain for Metro will be more muted, according to the broker-age firm’s forecast.

Metro Vancouver is expected to see its average house price climb 2.3 per cent to $802,000 in 2012, while Toronto is expected to see a 2.6-per-cent jump.

“Widespread calls for a major real estate correction in 2012 simply can’t be justified,” Royal LePage CEO Phil Soper said in a statement.

“The industry has significant momentum entering the year, and buoyed by the stimulative effect of very low interest rates, we expect the market to continue to expand – albeit at a slower pace.”

However, Royal LePage said stronger gains will be seen in cities benefiting from commodity-based economies, such as Calgary, Regina and Winnipeg, where price gains will be in the range of four to five per cent.

According to the company, in the fourth quarter of 2011, the average price of a standard two-storey home in Canada was $375,427, up 4.2 per cent from a year earlier.

The average rate of a detached bungalow was up 6.1 per cent to $344,392, while condominiums gained 3.6 per cent to $234,680.

Statistics Canada reported Thursday that its new housing price index rose 0.3 per cent in November, following on a 0.2 per cent increase in October, and was up 2.5 per cent yearover-year.

Price increases in Toronto, Oshawa and Montreal offset declines in Calgary, Metro Vancouver and the Ontario metropolitan regions of Sudbury and Thunder Bay, the agency said.

In Vancouver, Statistics Canada said some builders offered promotional pricing in order to sell units, which helped push new-home prices 0.3 per cent in November from October, and made the

Builders in the other areas reported lowering prices in order to stimulate sales and remain competitive, while price increases elsewhere were attributed to higher material and labour costs.

The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. has forecast the average price of a listed homes for resale to be $363,900 this year, up 1.2 per cent from 2011. The Canadian Real Estate Association predicted that the aver-age price would be relatively flat at $362,700.

Both forecasts were made in November.

http://www.vancouversun.com/business/Strong+market+means+house+prices+rise+major+cities+realtor+says/5990636/story.html

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Homeowners see lower costs with lower rates: RBC

Canadian homeowners caught a modest break during the third quarter as mortgage costs receded slightly, reversing a two-quarter trend in which affordability decreased.

A new report from RBC Economics says the driving factor was low interest rates, which helped reduce fixed mortgage rates across the country.

As a result, the bank says it was more affordable for Canadians to own a standard condominium, two-storey home or detached bungalow in the third quarter, though not by much.

The following RBC statistics include the total mortgage, utility and property taxes incurred by Canadian homeowners:

Owning a condo cost 29 per cent of median pre-tax household income at the national level, a drop of 0.2 percentage points from the previous quarter.

A two-storey home also became cheaper to own, but still costing 48.8 per cent of household income. That was down by 0.6 percentage points.

Finally, a detached bungalow ate up 42.7 per cent of that same income, a decrease of 0.7 percentage points from the second quarter.

In terms of a regional picture, RBC says Vancouver remains the most expensive housing market in the country.

In a statement, RBC Chief Economist Craig Wright said the Vancouver-area has “sky-high property values in upscale neighbourhoods making it both extremely unaffordable and the most at risk of a downward correction.”

On the other hand, RBC says Alberta is among the most affordable provinces in which to buy a two-storey home, detached bungalow or condo.

RBC also says that the Manitoba market “showed some of the more significant improvement in affordability among the provinces in the third quarter.”

Daryl Harris, a Winnipeg-based mortgage professional with Verico One Link Mortgage and Financial, said he was surprised by the RBC report’s analysis of the Manitoba market.

“Affordability generally follows one of two things, either lower rates or a decrease in house prices and I have seen neither in our market,” Harris told CTVNews.ca in a telephone interview on Friday.

Looking ahead to 2012, RBC believes housing prices are unlikely to soar any time soon.

“We expect to see further slowing in the pace of home price increases next year, as housing demand levels out,” said Wright.

“These factors will set the stage for a period of relative stability in affordability trends in Canada.”

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Housing ‘bubble’ bound to burst

When it does, the result isn’t going to be pretty, economist says

With fresh signs from the Bank of Canada that interest rates will stay lower for longer, Canada’s still-hot housing market has many of the hallmarks of the U.S. situation just a few years ago.

House prices dipped during the recession, but bounced straight back and have kept climbing since. And homebuyers are taking on record debt to buy houses at historically high prices.

When interest rates eventually rise, some forecasters warn the result isn’t going to be pretty. “Our view is that we are in a housing bubble, that housing prices have risen very sharply over the last 10 years, and that there is a big disconnect between housing prices and fundamentals, including interest rates,” said David Madani, an economist at Capital Economics in Toronto.

“It really does look like a housing bubble that will have a very unhappy ending.”

He predicted a 25-per-cent drop in house prices, adding Canadian homeowners would end up with negative equity.

Few economists are as willing to use the word “bubble” to describe Canadian real estate, even though the central bank noted in June that house prices are up 31 per cent from an early 2009 trough and are 13 per cent above their previous peak from before the global credit crisis.

Household debt is certainly soaring. Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney recently warned Canadians were “as indebted as the Americans and the British.”

But faced with a stumbling global economy and European and U.S. debt woes, the central bank opted on Wednesday to keep rates steady, with many economists now expecting easy money until the second half of 2012.

“In order to crash you need two preconditions: a huge increase in rates as in 1991, which is unlikely, and a subprime type situation, namely very low-quality mortgages,” said Benjamin Tal, senior economist at CIBC World Markets. “That is not the situation in Canada.

“So although I see prices going down over next two to three years, I don’t see a crash, I see a moderate gradual softening.”

The government, fretting about high debt levels, is working to engineer that soft landing with tighter rules for government-backed insured mortgages that took effect in March. The changes cap mortgage terms at 30 years rather than 35 and cut the amount homeowners could borrow against their homes to 85 per cent from 90 per cent.

Canada’s national banks are more conservative lenders than America’s fractured regional banks were, and there is virtually no sub-prime market, where riskier borrowers end up paying higher rates. Mortgage interest is not tax-deductible, so the incentive to buy a home is less. And a large slice of the mortgage market is insured by the government.

http://www.theprovince.com/business/Housing+bubble+bound+burst/5376062/story.html

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Average House Prices a Misleading Gauge of the Health of the Canadian Real Estate Market: CIBC

The Canadian housing market is becoming highly segmented and multi-dimensional which is making traditional measures, like average prices, increasingly irrelevant in gauging the health and state of the sector, finds a new report from CIBC World Markets Inc.

“Glancing at popular metrics such as the price-to-income ratio or the price-to-rent ratio, it is tempting to conclude that the housing market is already in clear bubble territory and a huge crash is inevitable,” writes Benjamin Tal, Deputy Chief Economist at CIBC, in his latest Consumer Watch Canada report.

“Tempting, but probably wrong. When it comes to the Canadian real estate market at this stage of the cycle, any statement based on average numbers can be hugely misleading. The truth is buried in the details—and there the picture is still not pretty, but much less alarming.”

He notes that while the average house price in Canada rose 8.6 per cent on a year-over-year basis in May, that number slows to 5.6 per cent if you take Vancouver out of the picture. Remove Vancouver and Toronto and the average price increase drops to 3.7 per cent.

By digging into the details on the high profile Vancouver market he found that the gap between average and median prices is reaching an all-time high. While the average house price climbed 25.7 per cent on a year-over-year basis to more than $800,000 in May, he found that by removing properties that sold for more than a $1 million there was a much more moderate price appreciation in the market. It also reduced the average sale price by $220,000 to just over $590,000.

“What makes Vancouver abnormal is the high end of its property market,” says Mr. Tal. “And in this context many, including Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney, point the finger at foreign—mainly Asian wealth—as the main driver here.”

Data on the extent of the role that Asian investors have played in Vancouver housing prices is quite limited. Mr. Tal’s analysis of data obtained from Landcor Data Corporation suggests that only 10 per cent of the nearly 4,500 transactions involving foreign money over the past five years were above the $1 million mark, with an average purchasing price of just under $600,000.

According to the information provided by Landcor, foreign money accounted for only 2.6 per cent of all sales during the same period. However, Mr. Tal believes that could be a serious underestimate, as it is based on where property tax assessments are mailed, and would exclude offshore buying on behalf of children or other local proxies. “There are many reasons to believe that a significant portion of what is perceived to be buying by offshore investors is, in fact, driven by Chinese immigrants that are integrated into the community but still maintain strong links to mainland China, with many residing and working in China while their family establishes roots in B.C.”

“Looking beyond the average price numbers reveals a highly segmented and multi-dimensional market that is probably influenced by different forces,” says Mr. Tal. “But even a multi-dimensional market can overshoot—and the likelihood is that prices in the Canadian market and its sub-segments are higher than what can be explained by factors such as income growth, rent and household formation. Given that, the housing market will eventually correct. The only question is what will be the mechanism of that correction.”

Mr. Tal feels the price correction in Canada will be gradual as the two key triggers for a price crash – a significant and quick increase in interest rates and/or a high-risk mortgage market that is very sensitive to changes in economic factors – are not at play in Canada.

“In Canada, a sharp and brisk tightening cycle is unlikely. The market expects a gradual increase in short-term rates in the coming years. The rising number of mortgage holders that carry a variable rate mortgage will be the first to feel the pain. But if history is any guide, they will return quickly to the comfort of a five-year fixed rate the minute the Bank of Canada starts hiking.”

He also believes that the country is in relatively good shape when assessing the two sub-segments of the mortgage market that traditionally account for most defaults: mortgage holders that carry a debt-service ratio of more than 40 per cent and those with less than 20 per cent equity in their house.

Just over six per cent of households have a debt service ratio of more than 40 per cent—a number that has risen by a full percentage point since 2008. “However, this ratio is still well below the ratio seen in 2003, when the effective interest rate on debt was more than a full percentage point higher, and no correction in house prices ensued,” adds Mr. Tal.

“All other things being equal, even a 300-basis-points rate hike by the Bank of Canada would take this ratio to only just over eight per cent. Not surprisingly, Vancouver has the highest ratio of households with high debt-service ratio, followed by Toronto.”

A little more than 17 per cent of the Canadian residential real estate pool is in properties with less than a 20 per cent equity position, a number that has been rising over the past few years. More than 80 per cent of households with less than a 20 per cent equity position are first time buyers.

“Digging deeper and looking at the households with both low equity positions and high debt-service ratios, we found that this fragile segment of the market accounts for only 4.6 per cent of total mortgages—a number that has been on an upward trend over the past few years,” says Mr. Tal. “Shock the system with a 300-basis-points rate hike and that number would rise to a still-tempered 6.5 per cent. Historically, even in that group, the default rate has been well below one per cent. Thus, short of a huge macro shock, there does not appear to be the risk of large scale forced selling that would typically be the trigger for a precipitous plunge in the national average house price.

“As a result, while house prices are likely to adjust as interest rates eventually climb, the national pace of any correction is likely to be gradual. That could still entail a period in which housing underperforms other assets as an investment class, until rising incomes and a tame price trajectory bring the market back to equilibrium.”

The complete CIBC World Markets report is available at: http://research.cibcwm.com/economic_public/download/cw-20110707.pdf.

http://www.digitaljournal.com/pr/356694#ixzz1XkKwWyPi

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Winnipeg facing “acute” rental shortage




These days, it’s no simple task to find a place to live if you rent in Winnipeg: a recent survey by Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation shows that the city has a 0.8 per cent rental vacancy rate, which makes it the lowest of 34 metropolitan centres surveyed.

The CMHC’s findings come at the same time as Winnipeg’s ranking as “affordable” has changed to “moderately unaffordable” in the seventh annual Demographia International Housing Affordability Survey.

Now, a group of Winnipeg-area realtors is saying that this “acute” rental shortage may actually be driving real estate prices up.

“There are some areas of Winnipeg where there is virtually nothing to rent so invariably any house that becomes available for sale becomes the only choice for someone to bid on,” Mel Boisvert, chair of the WinnipegREALTORS task force, said in a recent release, “First-time buyers in particular are finding it difficult because the entry level market under $200,000 is shrinking noticeably due to escalating house prices.”

The paper, titled “Manitoba’s Rental Housing Shortage: A Discussion Paper Highlighting Challenges and Solution,” raises issues like rent regulation and examines the role each level of government can play in helping solve Manitoba’s rental shortage.

“There is no magic wand or quick fix,” said Boisvert, “Hopefully, some of the solutions we put forward in the discussion paper will be considered. Doing more of the same is not an option.”

The WinnipegREALTORS task force wants to bring housing stakeholders together to discuss how Manitoba can address the rental shortage.

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Winnipeg encourages development as housing prices rise

In just nine months, condo and apartment developers in Winnipeg have exhausted the $20 million in tax incentives set aside by the city and province to boost the downtown population.

Now the city is considering offering up more, according to the Winnipeg Free Press over the weekend. Developers have approached the city and province with plans for 12 new buildings, provided the program is extended, said the article.

Some 670 new condo units and 130 new apartments will be added under the existing tax incentives. Developers were eligible for up to $40,000 in grant money for each housing unit built in the downtown area. A minimum of 10 per cent of the units also need to be designated for low-income earners and people with disabilities.

A national forecast produced earlier this month by Royal LePage said house prices in Winnipeg will rise at the fastest pace of any major Canadian city in 2011. The average house price in Winnipeg had already risen 10 per cent between 2009 and 2010, but will jump another 7 per cent in 2011 to reach $244,000, said Royal LePage.

As Winnipeg’s economy has prospered, demand for housing has risen. Encouraging more residential construction in downtown would add to the listings, possibly impacting pricing as well.

http://www.mortgagebrokernews.ca/news/winnipeg-encourages-development-as-housing-prices-rise/76006

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Days of low-interest borrowing may soon end in Canada, economic leaders say

Canada’s economic leaders are worried that low interest rates are luring consumers into amassing huge amounts of debt that they may not be able to pay back when interest rates rise from their historic low levels.

Canada’s central bank lending rate is 0.25 percent. Mortgage rates are about 4.5 percent, while five-year consumer loan rates for items such as automobiles are about 8 percent.

Recently, Canada’s Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and the governor of the country’s central bank, Mark Carney, have sent warning signals that the days of low-interest borrowing may soon end.

Their statements show that the Canadian government is afraid that Canadians will default on the loans that are used to buy homes. About 70 percent of Canadian families own their houses, and real estate makes up the bulk of the assets of typical Canadian families.

Besides, Canadians, especially those who have not saved for their retirement or do not have a workplace pension, see home ownership as a way of locking away money until their retirement, using the money from their house sales to top up their small government pensions.
Still, most Canadians must borrow the bulk of the money they use for home purchases. Most are content to assume this large debt if the cost of the monthly payments is comparable to rent charges, and if house prices continue to rise.

In the past decade, the government has allowed the term of mortgages to be extended from a maximum of 25 years to 35 years, and has permitted its home loan insurance agency, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, to sell insurance on loans with a down payment of only a 5-percent.

The system has worked to stimulate house construction, but analysts worry that it has created a speculative bubble that may burst, allowing house prices to settle back to a level that will leave many families owing more than their homes are worth. If that happens, the national government, already running a massive annual deficit, would be stuck with the loans of Canadians who defaulted.

Last year, Canadian resale house prices rose by more than six times the rate of inflation. Interest rates have also been kept low to stimulate borrowing for capital investment.

However, the rates will probably have to rise if Canada’s national government, its provinces and cities hope to sell bonds in a market already flooded with U.S. government debt.

In an interview broadcast this week on the country’s largest private television network, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty warned Canadian families that the days of easy home ownership debt may becoming to an end.

“If we see further evidence that there is excessive demand in the housing market or that there’s an indication that people are taking on obligations that they will not be able to handle in the future when interest rates rise, then we will take some action,” Flaherty said on CTV television.

“The likely action we will take is to increase the size of the down payment from 5 percent to a higher number, reduce the amortization — bring it down from 35 years to something less,” he said.

Canadian families traditionally saw home ownership as a sign of financial security. Prices have rarely fallen in the past century. When they have, the values quickly recovered. Last year, house prices rose an average of about 20 percent, while the official inflation rate is less than 3 percent.

The average Canadians have increased their personal debt by more than 1,000 Canadian dollars (about 955 U.S. dollars) in the first half of 2009, driving up the nation’s personal debt by 44 billion Canadian dollars (42 U.S. dollars).

However, Canadians gamble on interest rates. In the early 1960s,a time of low inflation, interest rates were comparable to today’s. In the fall of 1981, with inflation near 15 percent, mortgage rates reached 20 percent.

On a 300,000 Canadian dollars (287,000 U.S. dollars) debt, which is not unusual in a major urban market, a 20 percent interest payment would amount to more than a typical Canadian family earns, after taxes, in a year. Even a 12 percent rate, which was typical of the 1980s, would generate a monthly payment of more than 3,000 Canadian dollars (2,865 U.S. dollars).

On top of those charges, Canadians must pay property taxes and most mortgage companies require the house to be insured for its full value.
Flaherty said recent price increases for homes in Canada are due to a “confluence” of factors including low interest rates, an improving economic outlook and a stabilizing job market.

On Dec. 10, Mark Carney, the governor of Canada’s central bank, warned that Canadian families were becoming more vulnerable to interest rate fluctuations because they have added debt this year while other countries such as the United States and Britain have seen reductions in personal debt-to-income ratios. The bank echoed the warnings of several non-government economists who warn that the Canadian rush to indebtedness is unsustainable.

In the Bank of Canada’s semi-annual report, Carney wrote: “House
holds need to assess their ability to service these debt obligations over their entire maturity, taking into account likely changes in both income and interest rates.

“Financial institutions need to carefully consider the aggregate risk to their entire portfolio of household exposures when evaluating even an insured mortgage, since a household defaulting on an insured mortgage would likely be unable to meet its other debt obligations.”

Carney warned that the risk to Canadian banks is relatively low, but up to 10 percent of households would face serious problems meeting their house payments if interest rates rise.

However, Benjamin Tal, an economist with the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, a major mortgage lender, said Canadians find ways of hanging onto their houses when interest rates fluctuate, and tend to default only when they have lost their jobs.

Still, Tal said, “It is time for both borrowers and lenders to exercise prudence in continuing to build up household debt loads to the point where they are overly reliant on today’s low rates.”

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Housing here slightly less affordable

OWNING a home in Manitoba just became a little less affordable thanks to a bump up in mortgage rates and higher house prices.

RBC Economics said Tuesday the cost of home ownership in the province edged up by 0.2 to 0.4 percentage points in the July-to-September period.

The good news is it was “arguably the weakest deterioration” in affordability across the country, the bank said in its latest quarterly housing affordability report. In fact, this was the first decrease in affordability in Manitoba since early 2008.

RBC said the erosion in affordability was part of a countrywide trend.

“The reversal in the improving trend in affordability was caused by a recent pickup in key mortgage rates as well as gains in property values… ,” it said, noting the average posted rate on five-year conventional mortgages — the basis for the calculations in the RBC measures — went up modestly from a generational low of 5.45 per cent in the second quarter to 5.73 per cent in the third quarter.

And generally strong resale market activity across the country has heated up housing prices again since midsummer, after months of widespread softness, said senior RBC economist Robert Hogue.

He said that trend is likely to continue because house prices aren’t expected to fall any time soon and mortgage rates are headed higher in 2010.

He said Manitoba markets, in terms of affordability, are pretty close to long-term averages right now.

RBC’s affordability research measures the proportion of pre-tax household income required to service the cost of mortgage payments, property taxes and utilities.

Here’s how the affordability of four housing groups shaped up in Manitoba:

  • Affordability of detached bungalows increased by 0.4 per cent to 34.8 per cent, compared to a one per cent hike to 40.2 per cent in Canada.
  • Affordability of standard two-storey homes went up by 0.3 per cent to 37.5 per cent (1.2 per cent jump to 45.8 per cent in Canada).
  • Affordability of standard townhouses inched up by 0.2 per cent to 23 per cent (0.7 per cent increase to 32.3 per cent in Canada).
  • Affordability of standard condominiums increased by 0.3 per cent to 20.5 per cent (0.5 per cent increase to 27.6 per cent in Canada).

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/Housing-here-slightly-less-affordable.html

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Victoria British Columbia Canada Real Estate Valuations Values

More than 500 homes in Greater Victoria tip over the $1-million mark in past year.

The assessed value of Greater Victoria’s homes in 2008 has climbed to $83.7 billion, an increase of nearly $10 billion from last year’s roll, according to figures released yesterday by B.C. Assessment. The numbers, based on property market values as of July 1, 2007, reflect a steady increase, according to Brian Hawkins, assessor for the region. The majority of homes in the region will have increased by between eight and 12 per cent, slightly off last year’s average of 15 per cent.“It’s been basically the same story here for the last five years,” said Hawkins. He credits the continued strength in the market to the capital region’s being a “desirable location,” as well as the stable mortgage rate and low unemployment rate.The West Shore recorded some of the biggest increases in the region, with average increases between 10 and 15 per cent, while waterfront and acreage properties jumped up to 25 per cent.The increased values pushed 518 homes past the $1-million mark in 2008. There are now 2,864 Greater Victoria homes valued at more than $1 million, led by Oak Bay with 921, North Saanich with 551 and Saanich (school district 61) with 548. “It shows B.C. is a sound place to invest right now,” said Rudy Nielsen, CEO of Landcor, a Vancouver-based real-estate analysis company. “You won’t see the roll get smaller anytime soon.”Nielsen said migration and U.S investors are still helping drive the market by buying up property that they see as a bargain. “Our house prices are still cheap relative to prices around North America,” he said, noting B.C.’s housing markets might ebb and plateau but they’re unlikely to decline.However, real estate agents and home builders still expect a slow start to the year — although they disagree on the effect the release of assessment data will have.“Definitely, people look at that and realize houses are getting expensive, and it does slow the market down,” said Steve Copp, president of the Victoria chapter of the Canadian Homebuilders Association. “It takes a few months for purchasers to get used to [the prices] and they eventually realize they just have to get in and buy.”Pat Parker, an agent with Century 21 Royal Victoria Realty, downplayed the assessment effect, noting the weather could play a bigger role. But he did say homeowners get a little excited to find out their homes are worth more than they thought. “If they are selling, then they may try to adjust their prices if it’s in their favour.”

But that is not always the best idea. According to Tony Joe, president of the Victoria Real Estate Board, if a home wasn’t selling in December at a lower price, it won’t move any faster in January using a sticker price based on a new assessment.

He points out the assessments, which are based on sales figures and other factors determined in July, remain a reflection of where the market has been — not where it will go.

“But [real estate agents] will definitely get a lot of phone calls in the first two weeks of January with people asking, ‘Is this truly what my home is worth?’ ” he said.

The other question on many minds is the effect of the assessment on municipal tax rates, which will be set in the coming months.

Saanich Mayor Frank Leonard said it is a factor in setting the rate, but an increase in assessment rates does not necessarily mean an increase in taxes.

“It affects how the pie is divided but it doesn’t change the size of the pie,” he said, explaining that homes assessed well above the average increase will see a higher than average tax rate, and those below the average would see a decrease.

Property owners who feel that their property assessment does not reflect market value as of July 1, 2007, or see incorrect information on their notice, should contact B.C. Assessment. If they feel their concerns require further attention, they must submit a notice of complaint by the end of this month to get an independent review by a Property Assessment Review Panel.

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