Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Home Sales Rebounded In December Following Large Drop In November: CREA

16 Jan, 2017 12:32 PM
  • Home Sales Rebounded In December Following Large Drop In November: CREA
TORONTO — Home sales are not going to be as big of a boost to the Canadian economy this year as they were in 2016, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday as it released its latest batch of figures.
 
The real estate association says home sales were up 2.2 per cent in December from the previous month, rebounding partially from a big drop following the introduction of new mortgage rules.
 
The number of homes trading hands posted the biggest monthly retreat in more than four years from October to November, CREA said.
 
"New regulations mean that in order to qualify for a mortgage, home buyers will either have to save longer for a bigger down payment or purchase a lower priced home," CREA's chief economist Gregory Klump said in a statement.
 
"In urban centres where the latter are in short supply, that's likely to translate into fewer sales."
 
Ottawa moved to tighten mortgage rules in October, including requiring that all insured mortgages undergo a stress test to determine whether borrowers are still able to make mortgage payments if interest rates rise or their income declines.
 
Such tests were previously not required for fixed-rate mortgages longer than five years.
 
TD economist Diana Petramala says it will take some before the full impact of the changes materialize.
 
"Even though the mortgage regulations have already kicked in, they do not apply to those who had a pre-approved mortgage prior to the Oct. 1 implementation date," Petramala said. 
 
"As such, the effect may not be fully felt until January."
 
 
Residential construction contributed seven per cent of Canada's GDP last year, according to BMO economist Robert Kavcic.
 
While final figures for the full year are not yet available, Kavcic says the real estate industry as a whole contributed roughly 12 per cent of GDP.
 
That figure is likely to be lower in the year ahead, he predicts.
 
"One of the big contributors has been Vancouver, and just through the last four or five months the market there has already started to correct," said Kavcic.
 
On a year-over-year basis, CREA says home sales were down five per cent last month compared to December 2015, when they reached the highest level ever for that month.
 
Annually, the number of homes that changed hands was up 6.3 per cent last year compared with 2015, as sales started out strong before softening in the latter part of the year.
 
The real estate association says the MLS home price index in December was up 14.3 per cent compared with a year ago, while the national average sale price climbed 3.5 per cent year-over-year.
 
Supply continued to tighten, with new listings down in more than half of all local markets.
 
 
CREA said the number of homes newly listed for sale slipped three per cent from November to December, with B.C.'s Lower Mainland, Calgary and the Greater Toronto Area seeing the biggest declines.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval Prompts Anger, Promises To Protest In B.C.

Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval Prompts Anger, Promises To Protest In B.C.
Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson said he was "profoundly disappointed," calling the decision a "big step backwards" for Canada's environment and economy.

Trans Mountain Pipeline Approval Prompts Anger, Promises To Protest In B.C.

South Asian Heritage Learning Tools Receive Boost From Province

South Asian Heritage Learning Tools Receive Boost From Province
Peter Fassbender, Minister of Community, Sport and Cultural Development, along with Amrik Virk, MLA for Surrey-Tynehead, addressed Surrey high school students and community members at Simon Fraser University.

South Asian Heritage Learning Tools Receive Boost From Province

PC Teen Sam Oosterhoff Sworn In As Youngest-Ever Member Of Ontario's Legislature

PC Teen Sam Oosterhoff Sworn In As Youngest-Ever Member Of Ontario's Legislature
A homeschooled teenager was sworn in Wednesday as the youngest-ever member of the Ontario legislature, but his socially conservative views threaten to make him the Progressive Conservatives' problem child.

PC Teen Sam Oosterhoff Sworn In As Youngest-Ever Member Of Ontario's Legislature

Foreign Ownership Of Condos Lower Than Year Ago In Big Cities, CMHC Report

Foreign Ownership Of Condos Lower Than Year Ago In Big Cities, CMHC Report
Foreign ownership was the highest in Vancouver and Toronto at 2.2 per cent and 2.3 per cent, respectively.

Foreign Ownership Of Condos Lower Than Year Ago In Big Cities, CMHC Report

Trial Begins For Montreal Activist Who Staged Topless Protest During Grand Prix

Trial Begins For Montreal Activist Who Staged Topless Protest During Grand Prix
MONTREAL — The lawyer for a Montreal woman who staged a topless protest at the city's Grand Prix festivities in 2015 is asking for a stay of proceedings against her client.

Trial Begins For Montreal Activist Who Staged Topless Protest During Grand Prix

Fentanyl Deaths On The Rise In Ontario: Coroner

Fentanyl Deaths On The Rise In Ontario: Coroner
TORONTO — Fentanyl deaths are on the rise in Ontario, though the province's chief coroner says numbers there aren't as bleak as elsewhere in the country.

Fentanyl Deaths On The Rise In Ontario: Coroner