Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Pace Of Canadian Housing Starts Picks Up In June, Better Than Expected

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2015 01:28 PM
    OTTAWA — The pace of new housing starts picked up in June and came in better than expected, defying a recent trend of disappointing economic news.
     
    Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.'s seasonally adjusted rate of residential construction starts rose to 202,818 in June, up from 196,981 units in May.
     
    Economists had estimated there would have been a decline in the annualized rate to 190,000, according to Thomson Reuters.
     
    "Amidst a string of weaker-than-expected economic indicators, housing activity is proving to be the bright spot in the second quarter of 2015, providing some offset to what is ostensibly rounding out to be an otherwise disappointing economic backdrop," Royal Bank economist Laura Cooper wrote in a note after CMHC released its report Thursday.
     
    There has been a string of disappointing economic news in recent weeks including a contraction of the economy in April leading some economists to suggest Canada dipped into recession in the first half of the year.
     
    Speculation has also increased that the Bank of Canada may look to cut its key interest rate next week when it is expected to trim its economic outlook for the year in its monetary policy report.
     
    CMHC said Thursday the increase in starts came as the number of urban multiple-unit projects gained 3.7 per cent, while single-detached urban starts gained 2.0 per cent.
     
    Regionally, the pace of urban starts increased in British Columbia, Quebec, the Prairies and Atlantic Canada, while it slowed in Ontario.
     
    Rural starts were estimated at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 14,098 units.
     
     
    "If there's a recession in Canada, nobody told the housing market," BMO senior economist Robert Kavcic said. 
     
    "Even in Alberta, where the resale market has corrected, new construction activity is holding up reasonably well considering the challenges."
     
    Meanwhile, Statistics Canada said its new housing price index rose 0.2 per cent in May, following a 0.1 per cent increase in April, as gains in Ontario and Saskatchewan were offset in part by a drop in Quebec.
     
    The combined region of Toronto and Oshawa was the biggest contributor to the increase as builders reported market conditions and higher land development costs as the primary reasons.
     
    Hamilton and Saskatoon both recorded 0.4 per cent price increases in May.
     
    On a year-over-year basis, the index was up 1.2 per cent in May, up slightly from the 1.1 per cent increase in April.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Out-Of-Control B.C. Wildfire Forces Evacuations As Residents On Alert

    Out-Of-Control B.C. Wildfire Forces Evacuations As Residents On Alert
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A wildfire south of Lytton, B.C., has grown to 15 square kilometres, prompting crews to burn off potential fuel on the forest floor.

    Out-Of-Control B.C. Wildfire Forces Evacuations As Residents On Alert

    Investigators Try To Identify Human Remains Found During Mass B.C. Search

    Investigators Try To Identify Human Remains Found During Mass B.C. Search
    SAANICH, B.C. — Police say remains that were found on southern Vancouver Island during an extensive search for a missing person are human.

    Investigators Try To Identify Human Remains Found During Mass B.C. Search

    India Remembers Nek Chand, The Creator Of Chandigarh's Famous Rock Garden

    India Remembers Nek Chand, The Creator Of Chandigarh's Famous Rock Garden
    Nek Chand, the creator of Chandigarh's famous Rock Garden, died at the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research here early Friday following cardiac arrest, his family members said. He was 90.

    India Remembers Nek Chand, The Creator Of Chandigarh's Famous Rock Garden

    Body Of 65-Year-Old Canadian Found Floating In Gulf Of Thailand: Media Reports

    Body Of 65-Year-Old Canadian Found Floating In Gulf Of Thailand: Media Reports
    PATTAYA, Thailand — Local media reports say the body of a 65-year-old Canadian man who disappeared after renting a boat earlier this week has been found in the Gulf of Thailand.

    Body Of 65-Year-Old Canadian Found Floating In Gulf Of Thailand: Media Reports

    Dana Mckellar, Missing B.C. Man, Search Leads To Finding Of Human Remains

    Dana Mckellar, Missing B.C. Man, Search Leads To Finding Of Human Remains
    Investigators representing municipal forces and the RCMP began searching a parcel of land in rural Saanich on June 2 for the remains of Dana McKellar.

    Dana Mckellar, Missing B.C. Man, Search Leads To Finding Of Human Remains

    Sailors March Off Canadian Destroyer Ship Algonquin, As It Retires After 41 Years

    Sailors March Off Canadian Destroyer Ship Algonquin, As It Retires After 41 Years
    ESQUIMALT, B.C. — Forty-one years of distinguished service have come to an end for a Royal Canadian Navy ship that's been retired at a base on Vancouver Island.

    Sailors March Off Canadian Destroyer Ship Algonquin, As It Retires After 41 Years