MLS® home sales forecast revised
OTTAWA, Ontario, August 27, 2009 — MLS® home sales were much stronger than expected in the second
quarter of 2009, with activity having climbed throughout the
quarter and into July. The remarkable recovery of resale housing
has prompted a change to the MLS® home sales forecast issued by
The Canadian Real Estate Association for 2009 and 2010.
The speed and magnitude of the rebound in sales activity to date
has lifted CREA’s national forecast for the number of
transactions to 432,600 units. This represents an annual decline in
activity of 0.4 per cent compared to levels set in 2008, and is a
significant upward revision from the previously forecast decline of
14.7 per cent in CREA’s forecast issued last May.
“Sales activity started off the third quarter on a strong
footing,” said CREA President Dale Ripplinger. “The
difference in the resale housing market now, compared to the
beginning of the year, is night and day, and nowhere is this more
evident than in the West.”
British Columbia and Ontario are now forecast to post annual
increases in activity this year, reflecting weak demand last year
and a subsequent rebound. Forecast declines in annual activity were
trimmed significantly in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Quebec, and
were also shaved for New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
National MLS® home sales activity is forecast to rise 5.3
per cent to 455,400 units in 2010. This is a smaller rise in
activity than previously forecast. “Low interest rates are
boosting sales by returning homebuyers to the market who moved to
the sidelines late last year, and shifting ” said Chief
Economist Gregory Klump. “Buyers are also shifting purchase
decisions forward as they take advantage of attractive interest
rates now before financing costs increase.”
New listings have been edging down from record levels, with many
sellers taking their home off the market pending an improvement in
housing market conditions. Average price increases in the second
half of 2009 are likely result in a mild rebound in listings in
2010.
The national MLS® average home price is forecast to edge up
1.5 per cent in 2009, as the strong rebound in sales activity, not
price, in some of Canada’s most expensive markets continues
to skew the national, and some provincial, average prices upward.
Alberta is the only province with a forecast decline in average
price in 2009 (-4.4 per cent). Average prices are forecast to rise
in all other provinces except British Columbia, where average price
in 2009 is forecast to remain stable. CREA’s previous
forecast predicted a decline in the national average price of 5.2
per cent in 2009.
Average prices are forecast to stabilize over the rest of 2009
and into 2010, but weak results in the first quarter of 2009 will
result in a lower annual average price this year compared to 2010.
The national average price is forecast to be up 2.1 per cent on a
year-over-year basis in 2010.
The price trend is similar but less dramatic for the weighted
national MLS® average price, which compensates for changes in
provincial sales activity by taking into account provincial
proportions of privately owned housing stock. The weighted national
MLS® average price is forecast to climb 1.4 per cent in 2009,
with a further 1.7 per cent rise in 2010. CREA previously forecast
that the weighted national average price for MLS® homes sales
would hold steady from 2009 to 2010.
“The speed with which the Canadian resale housing market
has rebounded is unprecedented,” said Klump. “The
economic recovery is expected to be slow and protracted, so the
dramatic swings in activity seen in late 2008 and this year are
unlikely to be repeated in 2010.”
News source: The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA)
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