Canada house prices set for sharp fall in 2023; BoC to hike 75 bps on
Sept 7: Reuters poll
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[September 02, 2022] By
Indradip Ghosh
BENGALURU (Reuters) - Canada's soaring
house prices will decline sharply next year, but still not enough to
make them affordable as the Bank of Canada is set to continue raising
interest rates and keep them higher for longer, Reuters polls showed.
Fuelled by near-zero interest rates, already-elevated prices in one of
the world's hottest housing markets have surged over 50% since the
pandemic began.
The Aug. 12-30 poll of 14 property analysts showed average Canadian
house prices would rise 10.3% this year, slower than the current pace of
around 11%.
Although prices have declined nearly 6% since the BoC started hiking the
overnight rate in March, analysts say it will take years for
affordability to return, if ever.
Average house prices were expected to slump 7.8% next year,
significantly more than the 2.2% fall predicted three months ago. If
realized, that would be the biggest decline since at least 2005, when
the Canadian Real Estate Association started collecting house price
data.
Five respondents predicted a double-digit fall, as much as 18.2% next
year. House prices in Toronto and Vancouver were forecast to drop 8.5%
and 7.3% in 2023 after surging 13.0% and 10.6% this year.
"The pandemic may not be over but the pandemic-era housing market boom
certainly is. And the bottom is likely many months away still as our
central bank has more work to do," said Robert Hogue, assistant chief
economist at RBC.
Over three-quarters of economists, 20 of 25, who participated in a
separate Aug. 26-Sept. 1 poll said the BoC would raise rates by a
still-hefty 75 basis points next week after a full percentage point rise
in July, taking it to 3.25%.
"The BoC's outsized 100 basis-point rate hike delivered on July 13 threw
ice-cold water on the market - disqualifying some buyers from obtaining
a mortgage," said Hogue.
"Our expectation for an additional 100 basis-point rate increase over
the next two rate announcements... will no doubt keep chilling things."
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Single family homes are seen against the
skyline of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada September 30, 2020.
REUTERS/Jennifer Gauthier/File Photo
What is not cooling much yet is consumer price inflation.
Despite easing slightly in July to 7.6% from a near 40-year high of 8.1% in
June, BoC Governor Tiff Macklem said it would "remain too high for some time,"
implying the central bank, which has already raised rates by 225 basis points
this year, still has more to do.
The BoC was expected to deliver another 25 basis points in October to 3.50%. All
17 economists answering an additional question said the risks were skewed toward
a higher peak overnight rate than they currently expect.
Seventeen of 21 said once the BoC reaches its peak, it was more likely to hold
rates for an extended period than cutting them relatively quickly.
That is likely to keep pressure on economic activity, particularly in the
rate-sensitive property sector, where prices have gone far out of reach for many
people.
When asked to rate average Canadian house prices on a scale of 1 to 10 where 1
was extremely cheap, 5 priced about right and 10 extremely expensive, the median
forecast of 13 contributors rated it 8. For Toronto and Vancouver, the rating
was 10.
A median of seven responses on a separate question showed prices needed to fall
nearly 18% to be fairly valued. A few said they need to fall much more.
"The fact is home prices have been disconnected from incomes and rents for quite
some time," said John Pasalis, president at Realosophy Realty.
"Even if benchmark house prices fall another 30% nationally, this will just put
prices back to Feb 2020 levels (pre-COVID) which were not affordable at that
time, but buyers will also be faced with higher interest rates compared to
2020."
(Reporting by Indradip Ghosh; Polling by Swathi Nair; Editing by Ross Finley and
Jonathan Oatis)
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