Friday, January 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 May, 2020 04:34 PM
  • Metro Vancouver home sales down 39.4 per cent in April to near 40-year low

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver says home sales dropped by 39.4 per cent in April from a year earlier to hit an almost four-decade low.

The board says there were a total of 1,109 home sales in the month, down from the 1,829 sales a year earlier as activity was hit by a full month of physical distance restrictions related to COVID-19.

It says the sales total was 62.7 per cent below the 10-year average for April and the lowest total for the month since 1982. New home listings were down by 59.7 per cent to 2,313 in April compared with a year earlier, while the total number of active listings was down 34.6 per cent compared with April 2019.

The board says the sales-to-active listings ratio was 11.8 per cent, just nudging into the level analysts consider as signalling potential for downward pressure on prices.

Prices however held for April with the composite benchmark index price up 2.5 per cent from a year earlier, and up 0.2 per cent from March, at $1.04 million.

MORE National ARTICLES

Tories Will Support Aid To Canadians, Not Liberal 'Power Grab': Scheer

OTTAWA - Federal plans to speedily approve legislation freeing up billions in aid to help Canadians weather the COVID-19 pandemic have been held up over Opposition objections that the Trudeau government is attempting a power grab.

Tories Will Support Aid To Canadians, Not Liberal 'Power Grab': Scheer

No Immediate Plans To Use Cell Phone Tracking In COVID-19 Fight: Trudeau

But the prime minister adds that all options are on the table to keep Canadians safe during exceptional times.

No Immediate Plans To Use Cell Phone Tracking In COVID-19 Fight: Trudeau

One In Five Canadians Think Covid-19 Pandemic Blown Out Of Proportion: Poll

One In Five Canadians Think Covid-19 Pandemic Blown Out Of Proportion: Poll
OTTAWA - One in five Canadians weren't taking the deadly COVID-19 pandemic seriously as recently as last weekend, a new poll suggests.    

One In Five Canadians Think Covid-19 Pandemic Blown Out Of Proportion: Poll

Provinces Tighten Freedoms, Police Get Help From Citizens In Fight Against COVID-19

Provinces Tighten Freedoms, Police Get Help From Citizens In Fight Against COVID-19
MONTREAL - Police forces in Canada are getting extra powers, more flexibility and even help from citizens reporting on one another as governments seek to enforce decrees aimed at stopping the spread of COVID-19.

Provinces Tighten Freedoms, Police Get Help From Citizens In Fight Against COVID-19

Environment Groups, Churches, Unions Ask Oil Bailout For Families, Not Companies

Environment Groups, Churches, Unions Ask Oil Bailout For Families, Not Companies
Some Canadian organizations are asking the federal government to focus any bailout of the oil industry on workers and families, not corporations.    

Environment Groups, Churches, Unions Ask Oil Bailout For Families, Not Companies

Preparing For Battle: Doctor On Front Lines Shares How Health-care Is Changing

Preparing For Battle: Doctor On Front Lines Shares How Health-care Is Changing
TORONTO - Each morning when Dr. Seema Marwaha is preparing for work, she thinks about her husband, her 15-month-old son and the possibility she could bring home a dangerous virus.    

Preparing For Battle: Doctor On Front Lines Shares How Health-care Is Changing