Christine Chorney

RE/MAX Real Estate

Edmonton Realty Expertise

  • Office: 780-462-5000
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Monday, March 7, 2011

February Housing Prices mirror 2009 after increasing from January

Edmonton, March 2, 2011: It was 2009 all over again if the housing figures released by the REALTORS® Association of Edmonton are any indication. Prices for all categories of residential property sold in February mirrored prices in the same month in 2009 after showing pricing gains from January this year.

Single family detached properties sold for $359,934 on average* in February; up 1% from January. The February price was down 3.1% from a year ago but close to the $349,810 price in February 2009. Condo prices followed the same pattern. At $230,911 on average, condos were up 4.5% from a month ago but down 0.65% year over year. In February 2009, condos sold for $229,685. The average price for a duplex/rowhouse in February was $303,440; up 2% from January but down 5.6% from a year ago. In 2009, the February price for this category was $288,379.

"Sales and prices in early 2010 were pushed up by the impending mortgage rate increases and qualification changes," explained REALTORS® Association of Edmonton President Chris Mooney. "Now that the market is stable, price levels have returned to the 2009 levels. However, the price increases for all housing types from January indicate the slow upward movement that local REALTORS® anticipated."

The all-residential average price (including single family, condo, duplex, townhouse, mobile home and other residential housing types) was up three quarters of a percent from January but down 1.8% from a year ago. However, at $312,840 it matched the February 2009 price at $310,488.

REALTORS® listed 2,631 residential properties in February and sold a total of 1,044 properties. Current residential inventory is 6,389 up 13.4% from last month. The sales-to-listing ratio in February was 39% with days on market down from 67 to 58 days. "With the recent announcement by the Bank of Canada that interest rates are not being raised, consumers can have confidence in the strength of the local real estate market," said Mooney. "Call a REALTOR® to begin your house search."

- 30 -

Highlights of MLS® System activity

¹. Residential includes SFD, condos and duplex/row houses.
². Single Family Dwelling
³. The middle figure in a list of all sales prices

* Average prices indicate market trends only. They do not reflect actual changes for a particular property, which may vary from house to house and area to area. Prior period figures have been adjusted to include late reported sales and cancellations and therefore reflect a more accurate view of the period than previously reported at month end.

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Thursday, February 10, 2011

CREA revises 2011 housing forecast higher

CREA revises 2011 housing forecast higher

February 9th, 2011 by Larry Westergard

Canadian home sales this year will be better than previously thought, helped by improving consumer confidence that will partially offset the anticipated deterrent of interest rate hikes, the Canadian Real Estate Association predicts.

CREA released a revised forecast Tuesday that estimates there will be 439,900 existing homes sold in 2011, down 1.6 per cent from 2010, but better than the nine per cent decline that CREA had forecast at the end of last year.

The real-estate association is also taking a more positive view of pricing, with the national average price now expected to rise by 1.3 per cent in 2011 to $343,300. CREA had earlier predicted that the national average home price in 2011 would fall by 1.3 per cent from last year to $326,000.

CREA’s January sales data won’t be released until next week. But recent reports on building permits and housing starts — two indicators of how much new housing will be available for sale in future — indicate a measured start to 2011.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. reported Tuesday that the pace of new-home construction in Canada increased slightly last month, rising to 170,400 units, up from 169,000 in December on a seasonally adjusted annual rate.

That puts the country on a pace for about 10 per cent fewer housing starts than last year.

Krishen Rangasamy, an economist at CIBC World Markets said housing starts will likely soften over the coming months as home prices moderate and the Bank of Canada resumes its tightening cycle by mid-year.

A moderation in housing starts is a sign that supply is contracting in line with reduced demand, which could avoid an unhealthy glut of available houses on the market if demand declines when interest rate hikes are announced.

Some economists have warned that a combination of higher interest rates and new mortgage rules that go into effect March 18 could put a chill on demand in the later months of this year.

CREA predicted Tuesday that some sales that would have been made later in the year will likely occur in the first quarter, as a result of the new rules. A previous change in mortgage rules last year contributed to extremely strong first-quarter demand as buyers sought to beat the deadline.

“This is expected to produce a milder version of the volatility in sales activity that we saw last year which resulted from additional transitory factors,” said CREA’s chief economist Gregory Klump.

Last year, sales were also pushed ahead to the first part of the year as buyers in two provinces — British Columbia and Ontario — rushed to avoid a switch to the harmonized sales tax on July 1.

Those factors exacerbated the effect of interest rate hikes last summer and the market reached a trough in July.

Following last year’s pattern, sales will likely be robust in the first quarter as buyers enter the market before the tighter mortgage rules take effect and then drop off in the second quarter.

However, CREA predicts that the market will gain traction in the second half of this year as economic conditions, job and income growth and consumer confidence improve, in contrast to 2010 when economic growth softened.

“Even though mortgage interest rates are expected to rise later this year, they will still be within short reach of current levels and remain supportive for housing market activity. Strengthening economic fundamentals will keep the housing market in balance, which will keep home prices stable,” Klump said.

The Bank of Canada has forecast that housing will be a minor net negative for the economy this year, although it also cautions the market is a potential key downside risk for the economy.

It is expected to maintain its key lending rate at a low one per cent until at least the second half of the year, as some global economic uncertainty lingers. The key lending rate has the most immediate impact on variable-rate mortgages whereas home owners with fixed-rate mortgages won’t be affected until renewal time.

Royal Bank, CIBC and TD said this week they are raising the posted rate for a five-year closed mortgages by 0.25 percentage points to 5.44 per cent.

Meanwhile, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty warned Tuesday that Canadians should expect long-term mortgage rates to rise further.

“The recent increase by a couple of the banks is exactly what we expected,” Flaherty told reporters in the foyer of the House of Commons. “We’re likely to see higher interest rates as we go forward because interest rates are still very low.”

Last week, in the gloomiest report to date, Capital Economics analyst David Madani said house prices were just a few interest rate hikes away from a 25 per cent correction over the next three years.

However, a report released Tuesday by real estate agency Re/Max suggests the Canadian market has shown resiliency in the wake of major events in the past decade, such as the 9-11 terrorist attacks in 2001, the SARS health crisis in 2003 and the 2008-2009 recession.

The report said the market has self-adjusted as inventory dwindled during periods of reduced demand.

Through tumultuous times in the past decade, fewer real-estate listings led to higher home values, with national home prices increasing at an average of 6.82 per cent annually.

The market is on track to a similar realignment this year as the number of available homes trends downward, suggesting that the market is closer to seller’s territory, in which prices spike said Christine Martysiewicz, a spokeswoman for ReMax.

“Interest rates would have to go up significantly before we see any impact, and we wouldn’t see an immediate impact,” Martysiewicz said. “To say that there might be another real estate bubble is really not a responsible comment.”

CREA forecasts that national sales activity will rebound in 2012 by three per cent to 453,300 units, which is roughly on par with the 10 year average.

It believes the market will continue to be relatively balanced between sellers, or supply and buyers, or demand, although the supply of new listings of existing homes is expected to trend higher.

© The Canadian Press, 2011

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Friday, November 26, 2010

Market Update North America

Key Points From Benjamin Tal, CIBC Economist

  • The U.S. housing collapse won’t rebound anytime soon.
  • Tal predicts it will take until 2017 for U.S. home prices to rise enough to bring the average person with negative equity back to even.
  • That matters because America’s housing market is driving its economy, which in turn impacts Canada’s economy and interest rates
  • M1 velocity of money is the “most important indicator” that Canada’s mortgage market should be watching because it’s the top signal of U.S. inflation. U.S. and Canadian inflation are closely linked. Higher inflation leads to higher interest rates.
  • Tal says rising M1 velocity of money will be the “#1 signal” that mortgage rates will rise. When this happens, the U.S. Fed’s Bernanke will need to "remove liquidity from the system very quickly"
  • 5-year yields will “have to” increase in the next few years because the market is under-pricing inflation.
  • “The Chinese consumer will be the most important force in the global economy for the next 10 years.”
  • The Chinese are “starting to demand quality.” That’s positive for North America because the Chinese will increasingly buy our goods.
  • China’s demand for commodities (like oil) significantly influences financial markets. Oil has a 93% correlation with the S&P 500, for example.
  • If China expands, oil (and other commodities) will rise and 5-year mortgage rates “will go up.”
  • China will slow in the next 12 months, predicts Tal. But after that, it will resume growth and put pressure on 5-year rates.
  • “I’m almost positive the (U.S. Federal Reserve) will not change rates until mid 2012,” Tal said.
  • The BoC won’t “take chances” and raise our rates significantly above the U.S.
  • “The next few quarters are safe” from BoC rate hikes.
  • Consumers are “exhausted” due, in part, to a 146% debt-to-income ratio. As a result, it won’t take many rate hikes to slow the economy.
  • The “forward curve” (i.e. implied interest rates based on derivatives pricing) implies that 5-year fixed mortgages will be slightly cheaper than variable mortgages over the next five years. Tal put up a chart to this effect and 2011 is the first year in 10 years that this is expected to be true. (Take that for what it’s worth.)
  • When rates rise we may see mortgage defaults drop. That’s because rising rates imply rising employment, which influences defaults more than anything.
  • Only 4.1% of households have less than 20% equity and total debt ratios over 40%.
  • The quality of mortgage debt is improving says Tal. Specifically, the ratio of mortgage holders who are 35+ years old and making over $50,000 (adjusted for inflation) has steadily risen in the last 5-10 years.

Maritz Research

  • Overall broker market share was 26% in 2010.
  • Industry projections over the next five years are for a 9% point increase.

*CAAMP Forum 2010 Winds Down- Canadian Mortgage Trends – November 24, 2010

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Friday, November 5, 2010

Weekly Market Update North America

Weekly Market Insight

October 29, 2010

NORTH AMERICAN & INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC HIGHLIGHTS

Foreclosing Foreclosures—The Impact

By Benjamin Tal

The foreclosure fiasco that has seen paperwork errors paralyze the process in the US is another symptom of thedisease that has crippled the US housing market. While both the Administration and commercial banks fully realize that a complete moratorium on foreclosures will devastate the housing market, the inevitable delay in the process will add another roadblock on the way to recovery to a market that is already suffocating under the weight of an unprecedented amount of negative equity and a mounting stock of shadow inventories.
At this point, it is difficult to see what will prevent prices from heading lower again in the coming months.
 
Negative Equity
 
A real estate market cannot even remotely function in a normal way when no less than one in four mortgages are under water. Close to eleven million households owe more on their loan than their homes are worth at current market prices, and close to five million are in negative equity positions of more than 20%. Nevada leads the upside-down parade with a crushing 68% of mortgages under water, followed by Arizona, Florida, Michigan and California.
 
Negative equity is the main catalyst of distressed sales, which now account for one-quarter of all sales in the US housing market—five times the share seen before the crisis. Roughly one-third of distressed sales are in the form of short sales (in which sale proceeds fall short of the balance owed)—and these sales are now rising at year-over-year rates of more than 20%—the fastest pace on record. It’s no surprise then that short sales have doubled their share in total distressed sales in the past 18 months. With an average discount of close to 15% on each short sale, the acceleration in that process does not bode well for the trajectory of real estate prices in the near-term.
 
But even more damaging to near-term housing prospects is the high and rising correlation between negative equity and foreclosures. Greater negative equity increases the risk that a household will be in serious delinquency and a later default, and decreases the likelihood that a loan will be successfully modified. In fact, despite the high publicity regarding the Home Affordable Modification Program (HAMP) the reality is that to date, this program was ineffective in improving the situation materially. As of the second quarter of the year, the number of new foreclosures rose by just over 500,000, while the number of permanent modifications hasrisen by only 160,000. Note, however, that more than 50% of these modified mortgages end up defaulting after all, which means that at this point, the HAMP was able to deal with less than 15% of new foreclosures—not even close to the target for this program.
 
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Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Month-over-month price drop

Month-over-month price drop brings properties to 2009 housing price levels

Edmonton, November 2, 2010: Although the all-residential average price dropped 3% in October, average prices are almost exactly what they were a year ago. Single family dwellings were sold on average for $365,691 which is just $1,434 less (-0.39%) than October 2009. Condos sold in October for about $2,000 less (-0.9%) than a year earlier at an average price of $235,893.

“Stability is the key word for the Edmonton housing market,” said Larry Westergard, president of the REALTORS® Association of Edmonton. “Prices this fall are matching almost dollar for dollar with prices for the past two years. But I am pleased to report that the inventory dropped 10.6% in October, and as it returns to a more normal level, prices will start to move.”

The average* all residential price in October was $317,422 as compared to $327,235 in September. It was less than one percent lower than the October 2009 price of $320,184. Listing activity continued to slow with just 2,269 residential properties added in October. There were 1,077 residential sales for a sales-to-listing ratio of 44.5%. Total residential inventory was 7,689 properties at the end of October as compared to 8,602 the month prior. The average days-on-market went up to 60 days from 56 last month.

The all-residential median price rose from $306,500 in October 2009 to $308,000 last month. “This rise in the median price stretched the range of the lower end of the market,” said Westergard. “Yet REALTORS® still found 529 properties priced under $300,000 for buyers with smaller budgets or modest housing needs in October. There is still a home suitable for every buyer in this market.” There were 32 sales of residential properties priced at over $750,000 during the same month.

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Christine Chorney
  • Office: 780-462-5000
  • Toll Free: 1-877-462-7878
  • RE/MAX Real Estate
  • 220-6203 28 AV
  • Edmonton, AB
  • T6L 6K3 CA