Canada's red-hot housing markets hint at cooldown as higher rates,
inflation bite
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[March 25, 2022] By
Nichola Saminather and Julie Gordon
TORONTO (Reuters) - Toronto realtor Nasma
Ali has noted a marked slowdown in housing demand in the red-hot Greater
Toronto Area over the past few weeks, which she sees as a likely
precursor to a reckoning in the suburbs and surrounding towns that have
seen blistering price growth over the past two years.
"I had listings that, in January, would have had a 100+ showings," Ali,
chief executive of broker One Group, said. "All of a sudden, we're only
getting five to six in four days. This is a transition period and it's
not for all markets or price points. But we're seeing it."
Already, homes listed for sale in supply-constrained Toronto have fallen
at a slower pace than sales in February from a year earlier, compared
with most of last year when listings lagged sales.
The slowdown in major cities like Toronto and Vancouver and their
surrounding areas appears to be gathering steam, driven by a confluence
of factors.
For a related graphic on Canada home sales and new listings, click
https://graphics.reuters.com/CANADA-HOUSING/SALES/akvezjangpr/
chart.png
Worsening housing affordability, rising fixed and variable mortgage
rates, and accelerating inflation following Russia's invasion of Ukraine
is shifting sentiment.
Record-low mortgage rates helped propel Canadian home prices 52% higher
over the past two years. But as fixed mortgage rates rip higher
alongside surging bond yields and variable rates climb following the
Bank of Canada's first hike in three years, demand is cooling.
Money markets are betting the central bank will increase its policy rate
to 2.25% by year-end, up from a current 0.5%. [BOCWATCH]
"This is the most dramatic increase in five-year fixed rates that I can
remember, and I've been in this business for two decades," said David
Larock, a mortgage agent at Integrated Mortgage Planners. "I'm starting
to see purchase and sale agreements come in with financing conditions,
which has been unheard of in the last couple of years," he said.
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Realtors' signs are hung outside a newly sold property in a
Vancouver neighbourhood, September 9, 2014. REUTERS/Julie Gordon
Marnie Bennett, owner of Bennett Property Shop Realty in Ottawa, said she has
seen a shift in the market, particularly at the lower end, as affordability
concerns dissuade first-time buyers, and investors cash out near the peak.
"It's only because interest rates are so low that there's any affordability
left," said BMO Capital Markets Senior Economist Sal Guatieri. "But that
affordability will erode pretty quickly," he said, adding the central bank's
rate hikes "will douse the flames somewhat."
While that is unlikely to cause major damage to household finances, it will put
pressure on marginal buyers, he said.
Pedro Antunes, chief economist at the Conference Board of Canada, expects a
decline of about 10% in home prices from peak to trough, driven by the end of
pandemic income supports, rising interest rates and the return to more normal
consumer spending patterns.
"People are going to start taking their vacation trips south and perhaps not be
ready to put quite as much into a new mortgage," he said.
Despite the softness, both Toronto and Vancouver have seen price growth of 27%
and 20% respectively from a year ago. Prices are up 20.6%, on average,
nationwide.
"It's still a seller's market," said Toronto realtor Lisa Bednarski at BSpoke
Realty. "But what we're going to stop seeing are the homes that sell for
inexplicable amounts above their market values."
For a related graphic on Canadian house price gains by province, click
https://graphics.reuters.com/CANADA-HOUSING/PRICES2/
gkvlgqxbkpb/chart.png
(Reporting By Nichola Saminather in Toronto and Julie Gordon in Ottawa; Editing
by Denny Thomas and Jonathan Oatis)
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