Canada home resales fall in April as market cooling begins: CREA

Reuters

Published May 15, 2017 09:34AM ET

Canada home resales fall in April as market cooling begins: CREA

By Andrea Hopkins

OTTAWA (Reuters) - Resales of Canadian homes fell 1.7 percent in April from record highs in March as new listings spiked, the Canadian Real Estate Association said on Monday in a report that suggested a long-awaited slowdown in housing had begun.

The industry group said actual sales, not seasonally adjusted, were down 7.5 percent from April 2016, while home prices surged 19.8 percent from a year ago, according to the group's home price index.

Sales declined in close to 70 percent of markets, led by Toronto, where skyrocketing home prices had sparked fears of a bubble and prompted the provincial government to introduce new measures in April to rein in the market.

“Home buyers and sellers both reacted to the recent Ontario government policy announcement aimed at cooling housing markets in and around Toronto,” CREA Chief Economist Gregory Klump said in a statement.

He said the number of new listings spiked to record levels in and around Toronto and far-flung suburbs, where a severe shortage of listings had helped drive prices higher.

"It suggests these housing markets have started to cool," Klump said.

New listings rose 36 percent in the Greater Toronto Area and were up 10 percent nationally, the report showed, helping to ease the national sales-to-new listings ratio to 60.1 percent in April from 67.3 percent in March.

A ratio between 40 and 60 percent is considered balanced, and Canada's housing market had been firmly in seller's market territory for months.

There were 4.2 months of inventory at the end of April, up slightly from 4.1 months in March, CREA said.

Sales rose in Vancouver, which has mostly cooled since a foreign buyers tax was introduced last August, but remained down from record levels before the tax.

While sales slowed, prices continued to rise at a double-digit pace, according to the group's Home Price Index, which is used to ease the distortion caused by the expensive Toronto and Vancouver markets compared to the rest of the country.