Winnipeg homebuyers have something to smile about

The gods were smiling on Winnipeg homebuyers in the third quarter of this year, according to a new housing affordability report from RBC Economics.

The bank said Friday Manitoba saw some of the country’s biggest improvements in housing affordability during the quarter that ended Sept. 30.

Not only did mortgage rates decline from the second to third quarters, but selling prices also did an about-face, declining across the board after racking up some record-breaking gains in the second quarter.

The bank said the biggest retreat was in the price of a standard two-storey home, which declined by 2.4 per cent to $282,000. The average selling price of a detached bungalow fell by 1.6 per cent to $263,700, while the average price of a standard condominium dipped by 0.3 per cent to $157,700.

That news may come as a surprise to Winnipeggers who have grown accustomed to double-digit price increases for much of the last eight years.

But Peter Squire, residential market analyst for the WinnipegRealtors, said it’s not unusual for average selling prices to bounce around from month to month or quarter to quarter because of seasonal variations in the marketplace. He noted, for example, there tends to be more sales and more upward pressure on prices during the spring and summer than in the fall and winter.

But if you compare prices on a year-over-year basis, which is what the WR does in its monthly market reports, it shows the average selling price for a single-family, detached home in Winnipeg is still 7.4 per cent higher than it was in the third quarter of last year — $253,163 versus $235,822, he said.

Robert Hogue, senior economist for RBC Economics, said while selling prices are higher than they were a year ago, they’ve cooled a bit in recent months, and he expects them to remain fairly stable through to year-end.

Hogue said affordability in Manitoba remains near historic norms, “which is a telltale sign that home ownership in the province is reasonably achievable.”

RBC’s quarterly Housing Trends and Affordability report measures the affordability of housing in 13 Canadian markets by calculating the proportion of pre-tax household income needed to service the cost of owning a home at the going market value.

An affordability rating of 50 per cent means home ownership costs, including mortgage payments, utility bills and property taxes, take up 50 per cent of a typical household’s monthly pre-tax income. So the higher the rating, the more costly it is to afford a home.

The bank said Manitoba’s affordability rate declined in the third quarter for all three housing types. For bungalows, it fell 1.2 percentage points to 35.6 per cent; for two-storeys it dropped by 1.5 per cent to 37.9; and for condos it fell 0.5 per cent to 21.4.

Vancouver and Toronto had the two least affordable markets, with affordability ratings for a benchmark detached bungalow of 90.6 per cent and 52.1 per cent respectively. Other examples are 40.9 per cent for Montreal, 40.8 per cent for Ottawa, 37.6 per cent for Calgary and 33.2 per cent for Edmonton.

RBC said most of those markets also saw the affordability of bungalows improve from the second to third quarters. The lone exception was Calgary, which saw an erosion in affordability.

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/winnipeg-homebuyers-have-something-to-smile-about-134525028.html

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Manitoba’s housing affordability improves noticeably in the third quarter: RBC Economics

Manitoba’s housing affordability experienced some of the most noticeable improvements in the country during the third quarter of 2011, according to the latest Housing Trends and Affordability Report issued today by RBC Economics. Homeownership costs in the province fell, as mortgage rates eased and home prices reversed some of the record-breaking gains made in the second quarter.

“Manitoba’s affordability levels continue to stand near their historic norms – a telltale sign that homeownership in the province is reasonably achievable,” said Robert Hogue, senior economist, RBC. “Homebuyers took advantage of this more affordable market in the third quarter, pushing home resales higher by 5.3 per cent.”

RBC’s housing affordability measures for Manitoba, which capture the provinces proportion of pre-tax household income needed to service the costs of owning a home at the going market value, decreased across all housing types in the third quarter of 2011 (a decrease represents a gain in affordability). The measure for the benchmark detached bungalow in the province fell to 35.6 per cent (a decrease of 1.2 percentage points from the previous quarter), the standard condominium to 21.4 (down 0.5 percentage points) and the standard two-storey home to 37.9 per cent (a decrease of 1.5 percentage points).

RBC’s housing affordability measure for the benchmark detached bungalow in Canada’s largest cities is as follows: Vancouver 90.6 per cent (down 1.5 percentage points from the previous quarter), Toronto 52.1 per cent (up 0.1 percentage points), Montreal 40.9 per cent (down 1.3 percentage points), Ottawa 40.8 per cent (down 0.6 percentage points), Calgary 37.6 per cent (up 0.5 percentage points) and Edmonton 33.2 per cent (down 0.6 percentage points).

The RBC Housing Affordability Measure, which has been compiled since 1985, is based on the costs of owning a detached bungalow, a reasonable property benchmark for the housing market in Canada. Alternative housing types are also presented including a standard two-storey home and a standard condominium. The higher the reading, the more costly it is to afford a home. For example, an affordability reading of 50 per cent means that the homeownership costs, including mortage payments, utilities and property taxes, take up 50 per cent of a typical household’s monthly pre-taxed income.

http://www.newswire.ca/en/story/884395/manitoba-s-housing-affordability-improves-noticeably-in-the-third-quarter-rbc-economics

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Owning a home in Winnipeg became easier: RBC Economics

It got easier to own a home in Winnipeg in the third quarter of this year, according to the latest housing affordability report from RBC Economics.

The bank said today that Manitoba’s housing affordability experienced some of the most noticeable improvements in the country in Q3, as mortgage rates eased and home prices reversed some of the record-breaking gains made in the second quarter of the year.

RBC’s housing affordability measure represents the proportion of pre-tax household income needed to service the cost of owing a home at the going market value. An affordability reading of 50 per cent means homeownership costs, including mortgage payments, utility bills, and property taxes, take up 50 per cent of a typical household’s monthly pre-taxed income. So the higher the affordability measure, the more costly it is to afford a home.

The bank said Manitoba’s affordability measure declined in the third quarter for all three key housing types — detached bungalows, two-storey homes and standard condominiums. For bungalows, it fell 1.2 percentage points to 35.6 per cent; for two-storeys it dropped by 1.5 per cent to 37.9; and for condos it fell 0.5 per cent to 21.4.

Vancouver and Toronto had the two highest affordability measures for the benchmark detached bungalow, at 90.6 per cent and 52.1 per cent respectively.

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/business/Owning-a-home-in–Winnipeg-became-easier-RBC-Economics–134496428.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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Home prices to stay stable, RBC says






The Bank of Canada held its interest rate steady this week, but analysts suggest future mortgage rate hikes will be the biggest factor when it comes to assessing how affordable homeownership is for Canadians.

“Our affordability measure looks at the cost of owning a home at current market prices,” says Robert Hogue, senior economist at RBC Economics Research. “We calculate mortgage payments … utilities and property taxes. [The affordability measure] is all those costs as a percentage of the median household income, so the higher the measure, the less affordable is housing or home-ownership.”

The Housing Trends and Affordability report, covering the fourth quarter of 2010 released by RBC, indicates that, mainly due to lower mortgage rates, most categories of homes were more affordable for Toronto homebuyers. The RBC affordability measure for condominium apartments in Toronto eased 0.6 of a percentage point to 31.3%.

The affordability measure for detached bungalows in Toronto fell 0.5 percentage points to 46.8%, but for two-storey homes the measure rose 0.3 percentage points to 56.6%.

The RBC report says the rebound in the Toronto housing market followed the steep decline last spring and early summer, which in turn followed the unsustainably high levels last winter. Mr. Hogue says transitory factors, such as the introduction of the HST and revised mortgage lending rules, affected demand for housing rather than any underlying weakness in the Toronto market.

“[This week] the Bank of Canada decided [not to raise its rates], but interest rates are about to start rising again. This will, in our opinion, be the single most important factor eroding affordability over the next couple of years,” Mr. Hogue says. “Meanwhile, housing prices are relatively flat, [though] there’s a slight increase.”

Mr. Hogue says Toronto has many different pockets and types of housing, making generalizations difficult.

“In terms of affordability, I think rising interest rates will put a bit more stress on the market. At this point, we see the market as relatively balanced overall in Canada and Ontario. In Toronto, it might be favouring sellers a little,” Mr. Hogue says. “Generally speaking, we’re looking at a period of time where markets will be mostly balanced, so in that sense it’s unlikely that prices will start dipping in a significant way.” This expected stability in home prices means other factors will have more influence on housing affordability.

“Home prices have contributed fairly significantly to the deterioration in affordability prior to the downturn in 2008, but will not be that much of a factor going forward,” Mr. Hogue says. “Meanwhile, we are going to continue being in an economic recovery. In our opinion, employment will continue to grow, which will mean that household income will continue to rise. Higher income will partly offset the negative impact on affordability of rising interest rates.”

Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/life/Home+prices+stay+stable+says/4396076/story.html#ixzz1J7sg03x9

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Calgary one of the most affordable cities in Canada

A once red-hot housing market in the Wild Rose province has now cooled as new numbers show Alberta is the most affordable market in the nation.

According to the RBC report, that’s thanks to lower mortgage rates and a further softening in housing prices.

“The combination of prices that have gone a bit lower, meant that mortgage payments have gone down,” says Senior Economist Robert Hogue. “And this is what affordability really measures is those mortgage payments plus utilities and property taxes as a percentage point.”

Those numbers for Alberta are all down including detached bungalows, standard condominiums and two-storey homes that all dipped from one to 2.4 per cent.

The figures in Calgary paint a similar picture with affordability the best it’s been in six years.

It was just a few years ago when the average home price was over $500,000; that now sits at just over $400,000.

According to RBC Cowtown fell the most among Canada’s largest urban markets, declining by 0.9 to 3.1 per cent.

However Hogue says don’t expect Calgary’s reign at the top to last for long.

“What we’ve seen more recently is that market conditions are more balanced now, and the price declines that we’ve seen over the last few years have probably run their course,” he says.

Moving forward for 2011, he says Calgarians should start to see more of a middle ground, instead of a buyer’s market.

http://www.660news.com/radio/660news/article/188455–calgary-one-of-the-most-affordable-cities-in-canada

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Manitoba’s Homeownership Costs Among The Lowest In Canada: RBC Economics

Manitoba was one of only two provinces where homeownership costs stood below long term averages for all housing categories tracked by RBC in the fourth quarter of 2010, according to the latest Housing Trends and Affordability report released by RBC Economics Research.

“Manitoba’s housing market enjoyed the best of both worlds in the fourth quarter as home price moved a little higher yet ownership costs were lower,” said Robert Hogue, senior economist, RBC. “Continued growth in household income coupled with drops in mortgage rates late last year more than offset the affordability-eroding effect of small gains in property values in the province.”

The RBC Housing Affordability Measures for Manitoba eased for all housing categories in the fourth quarter, pushing levels further below their long-term averages in the province.

The RBC Measures capture the proportion of pre-tax household income needed to service the costs of owning a specified category of home. In the fourth quarter, the measure for the benchmark detached bungalow eased to 34.2 per cent (down 0.6 percentage points), the standard condominium decreased to 20.7 per cent (down 0.1 percentage points) and the standard two storey home dropped to 37.0 per cent (down 0.2 percentage points).

Sales of existing homes in the province significantly ramped up in the fall, reaching near historical peaks by December.

“The demand for housing is being boosted by the strongest net international immigration in the province since the mid 1950s and improved job prospects. Manitoba boasted Canada’s lowest unemployment rate in the fourth quarter of 2010, and we expect this to continue in 2011,” added Hogue.

RBC’s Housing Affordability Measure for a detached bungalow in Canada’s largest cities is as follows: Vancouver 68.7 per cent (down 0.4 percentage points from the last quarter), Toronto 46.8 per cent (down 0.5 percentage points), Montreal 41.3 per cent (down 0.4 percentage points), Ottawa 38.7 per cent (up 0.5 percentage points), Calgary 34.9 per cent (down 3.1 percentage points) and Edmonton 31.0 per cent (down 2.4 percentage points).

The RBC Housing Affordability Measure, which has been compiled since 1985, is based on the costs of owning a detached bungalow, a reasonable property benchmark for the housing market in Canada. Alternative housing types are also presented including a standard two-storey home and a standard condominium. The higher the reading, the more costly it is to afford a home. For example, an affordability reading of 50 per cent means that homeownership costs, including mortgage payments, utilities and property taxes, take up 50 per cent of a typical household’s monthly pre-tax income.

http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/February2011/24/c5440.html

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Canadian housing market had strong finish to 2009

The housing market in Canada has been stronger in the second half of 2009 than was widely anticipated. That has been particularly true for residential resales.

The first quarter of 2009 was nearly disastrous for the existing home market, but all of that turned around in late spring and early summer. Record low mortgage rates have done the trick.

Potential homebuyers know that they are not likely to ever see interest rates this low again.

As for new home construction, it is worth remembering that an existing home sale is often a prelude to a new home purchase.

There have been other factors that have contributed to recent resale strength as well.

The home renovation tax credit extending through February of next year is an incentive to spruce up one’s property and then, perhaps, put it on the market.

Also, Canadian labour markets have held up better than in the U.S.

The service sector in particular has experienced little in the way of job losses.

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The November labour report showed an overall increase in employment in Canada of 79,000 jobs.

There has been only one really bad labour market report in the past four months, in October, and that was partly an adjustment after strong August and September numbers.

The improving labour market overall, the Bank of Canada’s commitment to keep its trend-setting overnight rate at 0.25% until next summer, and the end to the recession are all serving to raise consumer confidence levels.

Add to the foregoing that foreign investors are seeing this country as well-positioned to benefit from the recovery. Foreign investment money is being attracted to Canadian stocks, commodities and to commercial and residential real estate.

The net effect is to raise the prospects for new home construction. CanaData has somewhat revised upward its housing starts forecasts for next year. The latest figures are set out in the accompanying tables.

It is remarkable the degree to which housing starts in the largest cities in Canada dominate their provincial residential markets. In Quebec, Montreal usually accounts for almost 50% of total starts in the province.

Toronto housing starts are usually slightly more than half of the total in Ontario. Calgary and Edmonton each account for about one-third of Alberta’s total.

Finally, Vancouver starts traditionally make up between 55% and 60% of total starts in British Columbia.

http://dcnonl.com/article/id36930

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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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