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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Line up financing before looking for U.S. vacation property

With winter looming, the lure of a vacation property in a sunny U.S. destination may be strong for Canadians looking to take advantage of low interest rates, a strong loonie and housing prices in the U.S. still suffering from a sluggish economic recovery.

Experts say Canadian buyers looking for a U.S. vacation home are advised to line up their financing before they head south with dreams of a sunny spot to retreat to when the snow starts to pile up.

Marc Knight, a real estate agent in Miami, says with cash on hand, the process is pretty simple for Canadian buyers. The trouble comes if you have to try and arrange financing from a U.S. bank.

“U.S. banks are definitely not lending as much as they did several years ago,” Knight said.

“For a foreign national, you’re probably looking at a 50 per cent down payment and then you also have to verify income, assets and so forth.”

However if you have the equity in your home in Canada, banks here are ready to lend.

Farhaneh Haque, director of mortgage advice at TD Bank, says there are two main ways to use the equity in your house to borrow the money for a vacation home — a home equity line of credit (HELOC) or refinancing your current home with a new mortgage.

A home equity line of credit allows a homeowner to borrow up to 80 per cent of the value of their home, less what they owe on their mortgage.

“It can serve to finance some of your investments south of the border at a very attractive rate. Presently you’re looking to prime plus one on the HELOC, so you can have access to those funds relatively quickly,” she said.

Alternatively, you could just refinance your mortgage, provided that you have the equity in your home.

“For example if your house is worth $500,000 and you only owe $100,000 on it, you could technically borrow another $100,000, $150,000, whatever it is that you needed… and use that as a cash payment for your property in the U.S.,” she said.

Haque said with rates for fixed-rate mortgages only marginally higher than variable rates right now, investors need to weigh their options carefully.

Potential buyers also need to keep in mind all of the extra costs, including condo maintenance fees, property taxes and utility bills, associated with a vacation property to make sure they don’t get in over their heads.

A report by TD last year found that more than one-third of baby boomers were considering buying a property south of the border. One-quarter said the prices brought on by the depressed real estate market in the wake of the financial crisis sparked their interest, while another 12 per cent were already considering opportunities.

Knight said he gets a handful of calls every week from Canadians looking for a vacation property.

“With the currency being what it is and the real estate prices having dropped significantly in Miami over the last couple of years, it makes sense for a lot of Canadians to look at Florida either for investment or for vacation properties,” he said.

Knight noted it wasn’t just Canadian snowbirds looking for a deal.

The Miami area, he said, has been on an upswing in the last year from the lows hit during the financial crisis as buyers from around the world have descended on the Florida hot spot.

“Buyers from Latin America, buyers from Europe, buyers from Brazil are buying some of the larger ocean front units and right now several developers have actually planned to build new condo towers, particularly in the downtown Miami area,” he said.

“The market overall is still pretty soft here in the United States, but in Miami it is definitely firming up and moving higher.”

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/finance/line-up-financing-before-looking-for-us-vacation-property-experts-say-133178463.html

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Canadian first time buyers rush to beat interest rate rises

According to estate agents REMAX, nearly a third of the 19 major Canadian markets are reporting a larger number of sales than this time last year, and 70% say that average selling prices have increased. Prices in greater Vancouver have increased by as much as 20% this year with Hamilton Burlington showing an 8% increase year-on-year, and Winnipeg, Toronto and Québec city are all reporting price increases.

Much of this activity is thought to be due to first-time buyers anxious to take advantage of low interest rates and also because of the changes to mortgage lending for new homeowners that are stricter with shorter terms. In general the Canadian economy is well placed with consumer confidence rising and fears of a double dip recession receding, and the residential property market is preparing for a busy spring.

One factor that may hamper the market is the lack of affordable housing for first-time buyers and those on low incomes. This is leading planners and developers to change their criteria towards building smaller condo units and homes. This demand for reasonably priced property is expected to grow in coming years.

Even though home ownership rates are at nearly 70% there is still room for growth in the market and it seems unlikely that buyers will be deterred by the higher cost of lending and housing. Canadians still believe strongly in home ownership and don’t want to rent and pay someone else’s mortgage. This means that starter homes will become more and more necessary for first-time buyers.

http://www.property-abroad.com/canada/news-story/canadian-first-time-buyers-rush-to-beat-interest-rate-rises-19317049/

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Canada’s housing market will slow, bank says

Scotiabank says Canada’s housing market is expected to see a modest slowdown in sales heading into 2012 and relatively flat prices, while several other countries will struggle.

The bank said in a report released Tuesday that Canada’s housing market has begun to cool, but it remains a “notable outperformer” compared with other countries.

“Ultra-low interest rates will continue to support affordability [in Canada] in the face of record high prices,” senior economist Adrienne Warren said. “Nonetheless, heightened economic uncertainty combined with recent signs of a loss of momentum in Canada’s jobs market could keep some potential buyers on the sidelines for the time being.”

Scotiabank said that of nine major developed markets it tracks, only three — Canada, France and Switzerland — had year-over-year real price growth in the second quarter of this year.

Prices in Canada were up by five per cent for that period, while figures for July and August show stable sales and a levelling out of prices.

In the other six countries — Sweden, the United States, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia and Spain — annual prices declined in the second quarter.

The bank said global housing demand is expected to remain “moribund” until the global economic recovery takes root and financial market stability returns.

“An oversupply of owner-occupied housing, due to overbuilding and rising foreclosures, remains problematic in many markets, adding to the downward pressure on prices,” the bank said. “A generally more cautious lending environment also will hold back the pace of recovery.”

http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2011/09/27/housing-market-scotiabank.html

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Is Government intervention needed to stop the rise in Canadian house prices?

High housing prices across the country have some wondering if government intervention is needed to make owning a house a realistic goal for the average Canadian family.

A BMO Capital Markets report, suggests that while a real estate market correction is imminent, low interest rates, and levels of immigration and foreign investment have buoyed home prices to historic heights when compared to family incomes.

“At 5.1-times median family income, housing is by no means cheap, costing an extra two years of gross income compared with 2001, when the boom began and valuations were closer to historic norms,” noted the report.

In Vancouver, Canada’s most expensive city, the average-priced home is now an astounding 11.2 times family income, more than double the decade earlier ratio and the current national figure.

“Riding a wave of wealthy immigrants, Vancouver’s house prices have nearly tripled in the past decade, spiralling beyond the reach of most first time buyers or non-lottery winners,” the report stated.

“Demographia’s survey ranked Vancouver the third least affordable among 325 world markets, just behind Hong Kong and Sydney, two other cities influenced by mainland Chinese demand.”

During last week’s Federation of Canadian Municipalities meeting in Halifax, Canada’s mayors urged the federal government to provide more money for affordable housing and transit to alleviate some of the market pressures.

A former Vancouver City Councillor believes the Government needs a more interventionist approach.

Peter Ladner believes Canada needs to introduce foreign ownership restriction and higher property transfer taxes for those that don’t live and work in Canada.
“If our prices are being driven up by people who are simply investing in our community and not living here, there are a whole lot of problems that result,” he told CBC Radio.
“(The high prices) erode the economy, it erodes the community when people come here and buy homes they don’t live in and it makes the neighbourhoods unsafe and — and less vibrant, it splits up families.”

Ladner cites Australia as an example of a country which uses regulatory tools to try and slow ballooning housing costs.

In Australia, foreigners living overseas are prevented from buying existing homes and only allowed to buy or build new ones. Moreover, temporary residents are forced to sell property once they leave Australia, and foreigners are required to build on vacant land within two years of purchase to avoid land banking.

“If we want to look at the options, okay, if it’s not restricting foreign ownership what are the options?” said Ladner.

“You can increase supply and — and we’re trying to do that, but that’s — that’s a big problem, too. So let’s look at this thing and let’s have a discussion about it.”

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/canada-politics/government-intervention-needed-stop-rise-canadian-house-prices-165730159.html

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Home prices on course to hit record highs in 2010




A rush to buy, sparked by expectations of higher mortgage rates and the pending harmonized sales tax in Ontario and British Columbia, is fuelling an ever sharper rebound in the real estate market.

Already an extraordinary turnaround story in the wake of the recession, new home construction is picking up and resale prices are now forecast to hit fresh records this year. In some areas, such as Vancouver, the country’s richest market, prices are now at the point where detached homes are out of reach for many home buyers – even with extremely low interest rates.

Home prices in Canada will surge to new highs this year, led by strength in the Western provinces and Quebec, says a new forecast by the Canadian Real Estate Association. The group sees average prices rising to $337,500, up more than 5 per cent from last year, while sales activity will also reach a record before cooling next year, the Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA) predicted Monday.

The projection is likely to raise the temperature on the debate over whether the recent price increases are sustainable, given that the Canadian economy is only just emerging from a sharp recession, job creation remains muted and interest rates are set to rise. Home prices in December were 19 per cent higher than they were a year earlier, a startling jump that has alarmed the country’s top bankers.

Some bankers have privately urged the government to cool the market by tightening the rules for mortgages.

While most economists believe activity will ease by the end of the year, the question is whether the market will land softly – or with a thud.

Feverish demand has taken even those in the sector by surprise.

Bill Szeto has worked in the real estate industry for 16 years and never seen such a dizzying rebound in the property market. In Vancouver, demand is being driven by people wanting to purchase before rates go up, by overseas buyers looking for an investment property, and by those who want to purchase before the HST affects the cost of new homes.

Add to that a number of sellers who have been holding off on listing their properties until after the Olympics, and the result is a big shortage of available homes, driving up prices, says Mr. Szeto, vice-president of Macdonald Realty in Vancouver.

“Our inventory has dropped dramatically from last year to half of what it was,” Mr. Szeto said. “Then, there’s this urgency right now to buy, and a lot of it comes down to affordability.”

CREA forecasts a price increase of 4.2 per cent in British Columbia this year. But it doesn’t expect the torrid pace of price increases in the first half of the year to last. And prices may even drop slightly next year, the group said.

One reason is that supply should loosen. Housing starts have risen for three months in a row, jumping 5.8 per cent to 186,300 units in January on a seasonally adjusted annual basis, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. said in a separate report Monday.

“We’re not in the bubble camp,” said Peter Norman, senior director of economic consulting at Altus Group, a real estate consulting firm. “It’s hard to get terribly excited about a strong sustained recovery in the housing market in a situation where the unemployment rate remains elevated nationally. It’s hard to imagine this strength is going to continue unabated.”

A double-dip in the housing market is possible and could lead to “some house-price declines,” Mr. Norman said.

Factors that typically drive home prices – such as population growth, income trends and economic activity – mean “we do think home prices at the moment are somewhat overvalued, and that raises the risk you’ll see some softening over the next several years,” said Bank of Nova Scotia senior economist Adrienne Warren.

CREA, for its part, warns that year-over-year comparisons right now are skewed because of such a sharp slump last year, and may make the numbers look hotter than they actually are.

“Temporary factors at play are turbo-charging year-over-year price comparisons … that will fade come the second half of the year,” CREA chief economist Gregory Klump said.

Both Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney have played down the notion of a housing bubble in Canada – though they, along with much of the country, are keeping a close eye on developments.

http://www.ctv.ca/generic/generated/static/business/article1460606.html

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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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BMO: Time for Homeowners/Prospective Buyers to Stress Test their Budget

Talk to a BMO Bank of Montreal banker about considering a bigger downpayment and reducing the amortization on your mortgage to save money

The housing market in Canada has seen existing Canadian home sales surge 76 per cent from their January lows. Not only that, in November, existing home prices spiked 19 per cent above year-ago levels, the second fastest clip in two decades. With record low interest rates, more people than ever are looking to purchase a home. However, BMO experts are predicting that interest rates will rise in 2010.

“We expect the Bank of Canada’s overnight rate target to climb from 0.25 per cent beginning in July 2010, to 4.25 per cent in mid-2012. In turn, consumers can also expect mortgage rates to increase,” said Sal Guatieri, Senior Economist, BMO Capital Markets. “While today’s ultra-low borrowing costs represent a unique opportunity to purchase a property, home buyers need to proceed with caution and keep in mind that renewal rates will likely be substantially higher in coming years.”

“Stretching the limits of your budget by choosing the maximum amortization period and a minimum downpayment leaves you little wiggle room to deal with an unexpected financial challenge,” said Jane Yuen, Senior Manager, Mortgages, BMO Bank of Montreal. “A meaningful down payment and shortening your amortization by making extra payments on your mortgage will save you tens of thousands of dollars in interest costs.”

http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/December2009/22/c5258.html

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Bank of Canada Levels of Overnight Key Interest Rates Levels Reassurance

Moves by the Bank of Canada to lower its trend setting rate  has well been boosting as well as sustaining the Canadian housing market currently in the spring of 2009 experts notes.  It has been stated and remarked on  that the Bank of Canada has done its best to signal that interest rates will continue to be on the low side of the sliding scale into the early 2010 year period.  It can be stated indeed that with interest rates at what might be well considered very low if not at historical low levels that housing affordability in Canada will remain most attractive for the current as well as near future time periods.

Bank of Canada warns of rising household debt | Money | Winnipeg Sun – The Royal predicts growth will return next year as the U.S. and Canadian economies benefit from low interest rates, firmer credit markets and government stimulus programs. It also predicts the national jobless rate will hit 9%, …

Bank Of Canada Keeps Interest Rates On Hold At 0.25% – Forex … – Bank Of Canada Keeps Interest Rates On Hold At 0.25% The Bank of Canada today maintained the overnight target rate at 0.25% and reiterated its conditional commitment to hold current policy rate until the end of the second quarter of …

The Bank of Canada has continually , if not even regularly , in the current  and recent time periods has been lowering the benchmark “overnight lending rate”  and rates repeatedly.   The current round of rate cuts presents an excellent set of opportunities for those looking to purchase home or commercial real estate regardless.    In the economic recessions of the 1980′s as well as that of the 1990′s  , in the resale housing property markets overall activity “bottomed out”  long before the time periods when the overall Canadian economy and investment communities did.    Currently the Bank of Canada  has done its best to acknowledge that the current economic recession has somewhat intensified , especially in the more manufacturing reliant Eastern Canadian regions certainly since its economic forecasts of early 2009 .   The bank has been unusually explicit in its language about holding its key interest rates at this “rock bottom ” series of levels now that the inflation outlook has been downgraded as a major concern , at least at the bank’s estimate and privileged expert estimation and estimations.   Lastly by saying that the target overnight interest rates can be expected to be maintained at the current levels until the end of the second quarter time periods of 2010 , in order to achieve the inflation targets , the Bank of Canada has removed any guesswork for financial as well as economic projections on the time periods that it can be expected to resume any upward trends.

Bank of Canada Interest Rate to stay at $.25 – “The bank retains considerable flexibility in the conduct of monetary policy at low interest rates,” the statement said. The Bank of Canada said April 23 it’s ready to purchase debt if the outlook for th

Bank of Canada warns of rising household debt | Money | Winnipeg Sun – The Royal predicts growth will return next year as the U.S. and Canadian economies benefit from low interest rates, firmer credit markets and government stimulus programs. It also predicts the national jobless rate will hit 9%, … as the  deteriorates further, …

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