2009 resale housing market ends on a high note
Residential sales activity via the Multiple Listing Service(R) (MLS(R)) of Canadian real estate boards numbered 27,744 units in
Seasonally adjusted national home sales totalled 46,805 units in December, capping the strongest fourth quarter period ever. A total of 137,957 homes traded hands on a seasonally adjusted basis in the fourth quarter of 2009. This is up 2.6 per cent from the previous record set in the first quarter of 2007. New quarterly records were set in British Columbia, Ontario, and
National sales activity began 2009 on a weak footing. Despite year-over-year increases in the second and third quarters of the year, year-to-date activity was still trailing 2008 levels at the end of
"Sales activity in 2009 came in like a lamb and went out like a lion," said CREA
Annual activity in 2009 was down 10.7 per cent from the peak reached in 2007. A total of 465,251 homes traded hands through the MLS(R) systems of real estate boards in
The national residential average price was
The large year-over-year increase in the national average price in December reflects the high degree to which it was skewed downward in late 2008 by unusually low activity in Canada's priciest markets. The national average price was also skewed upward by rebounding activity in the spring and summer months of 2009. The national average price rose to unprecedented heights at that time, despite records having been set in only a small number of local markets.
The contribution of activity by higher priced markets toward the national average price has recently returned to more typical levels. Record level average prices in most regions are now driving the national average price to new heights.
The price trend is similar but less dramatic for the national weighted average price, which compensates for changes in provincial sales activity by taking into account provincial proportions of privately owned housing stock. It climbed 3.6 per cent in 2009.
The residential average price in Canada's major markets was up 5.5 per cent year-over-year to
Strong demand and headline average price gains are drawing more sellers to the market. New listings coming onto Board MLS(R) Systems across
The recent rising trend in new listings has not yet offset the steep decline in the number of new listings during the first half of 2009. As a result, new listings in 2009 were down 12.6 per cent from the annual peak in 2008.
Despite the recent rise in new listings, strong demand for resale housing continues to draw down inventories. There were 154,264 homes listed for sale on Boards' MLS(R) Systems in
Nationally, there were 4.1 months of inventory in
The actual (not seasonally adjusted) number of months of inventory in
"CREA's latest statistics will no doubt spark further bubble talk amongst the usual suspects," said CREA Chief Economist
"The extraordinary decline in activity one year ago and subsequent rebound, particularly for higher-priced real estate, is stretching current year-over-year comparisons," he said. "By the second half of 2010, price gains are likely to shrink significantly, since a year will have elapsed since the decline and rebound. Klump added that, "Further expected increases in supply will also take some steam out of the market. A more balanced market will result in smaller price increases in the second half of the year, but a massive decline in demand similar to what we saw in late 2008 and early 2009 seems as unlikely as a massive spike in supply."
For further information: Alyson Fair, Publicist, The Canadian Real Estate Association, Tel: (613) 237-7111 X 2284, Cell: (613) 884-1460, [email protected]
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