Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Home Sales Stayed Strong In August But Experts Predict Change Is Coming

Darpan News Desk, 14 Sep, 2017 12:47 PM
    VANCOUVER — The association representing realtors in British Columbia says home sales remained healthy across the province in August, but it expects to see a change over the coming months.
     
    The B.C. Real Estate Association says 9,162 residential properties were sold in August.
     
    That's a 2.4 per cent increase compared with the same period last year.
     
    The total dollar value of all sales climbed significantly to $6.2 billion, a 22 per cent jump from August 2016, while the association says the average property price was up 19.1 per cent to $678,186.
     
    Association chief economist Cameron Muir points to strong economic conditions propelling the August sales, which he says mirror figures in July on a seasonally adjusted basis.
     
    But Muir also warns that climbing mortgage rates and home prices could dampen housing markets this fall.
     
     
    "Rising home prices combined with upward pressure on mortgage interest rates is expected to temper demand over the balance of the year," Muir says in a news release. 
     
    Year-to-date figures in 2017 are still overshadowed by the sizzling first half of last year's residential property market in B.C., with sales dollar volume down 15.9 per cent to $51.8 billion when compared with the first eight months of 2016.
     
    Residential sales dipped 15 per cent over the same period while the association says the average property price was down 1.1 per cent to $706,839.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    National Park Beach Closed Near Ucluelet, B.C., After Wolf Attacks Dog

    National Park Beach Closed Near Ucluelet, B.C., After Wolf Attacks Dog
    UCLUELET, B.C. — A popular section of beach along the West Coast of Vancouver Island has been closed after a wolf attacked a dog in a national park.

    National Park Beach Closed Near Ucluelet, B.C., After Wolf Attacks Dog

    Crewman Is Mauled And Badly Injured By Grizzly Attack In Remote B.C. Forest

    Crewman Is Mauled And Badly Injured By Grizzly Attack In Remote B.C. Forest
    A man working in the forest on British Columbia's central coast was mauled by a grizzly Wednesday.

    Crewman Is Mauled And Badly Injured By Grizzly Attack In Remote B.C. Forest

    Jassi Sidhu Honour Killing: Canada's Supreme Court Hears Extradition Case Against Mother, Uncle

    Jassi Sidhu Honour Killing: Canada's Supreme Court Hears Extradition Case Against Mother, Uncle
    Canada is confident assurances from India will be enough to prevent the accused in a so-called honour killing of being mistreated if extradited, a lawyer has told the Supreme Court.

    Jassi Sidhu Honour Killing: Canada's Supreme Court Hears Extradition Case Against Mother, Uncle

    Safer Surrey For All: Surrey RCMP To Host Spring Neighbourhood Safety Meetings At These Locations

    Safer Surrey For All: Surrey RCMP To Host Spring Neighbourhood Safety Meetings At These Locations
    This spring, the Surrey RCMP and partners will once again be hosting a series of Neighbourhood Safety Meetings to share information about localized crime trends and current actions underway to address these crimes.

    Safer Surrey For All: Surrey RCMP To Host Spring Neighbourhood Safety Meetings At These Locations

    Coroner's Jury Wants Better Mental Health Support For Vancouver Transit Police

    Coroner's Jury Wants Better Mental Health Support For Vancouver Transit Police
    Naverone Woods, 23, was shot by a transit police officer inside a Safeway store in Surrey, B.C., on the morning of Dec. 28, 2014. He was a member of the Gitxsan First Nation who had lived in Terrace and Hazelton in northern British Columbia.

    Coroner's Jury Wants Better Mental Health Support For Vancouver Transit Police

    Nova Scotia Intimate-photo Case Results In Guilty Pleas From All Six Accused

    Nova Scotia Intimate-photo Case Results In Guilty Pleas From All Six Accused
    HALIFAX — Six male teenagers in Nova Scotia pleaded guilty Wednesday to sharing intimate images of high school girls without their consent, concluding one of Canada's largest prosecutions involving a relatively untested but high-profile law.

    Nova Scotia Intimate-photo Case Results In Guilty Pleas From All Six Accused