DECEMBER 15TH NEWS RELEASE -“The Canadian housing market is proving resilient in the face of ongoing global economic and financial uncertainty, to the benefit of Canadian economic growth,”
Canadian home sales edge
higher in November
http://creastats.crea.ca/natl/
OTTAWA - December 15, 2011 - According to statistics[1]
released today by The Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA), national resale
housing activity rose slightly in November 2011 from the previous month.
Highlights:
- Sales activity rose slightly
(+0.5 per cent) from October to November on a seasonally adjusted basis.
- Year-to-date sales remained in
line with the 10 year average, but pulled further ahead of last year’s
levels.
- The number of newly listed
homes was down 3.4 per cent from October to November.
- The national housing market
remains balanced, but is edging closer to seller’s market territory.
- The national average price
posted a 4.6 per cent year-over-year gain in November, the smallest increase
since January.
Sales activity recorded
through the MLS® Systems of real estate Boards and Associations in Canada edged
upward by one-half of a percentage point. This marks the third straight month
in which national activity was up from the previous month’s levels.
Activity rose in about 60 per
cent of all local markets with a record November in the Halifax-Dartmouth
region offsetting a dip in sales in Toronto.
“The Canadian housing market
is proving resilient in the face of ongoing global economic and financial
uncertainty, to the benefit of Canadian economic growth,” said Gary Morse,
CREA’s President. “That said, some housing markets are picking up while others
are holding steady or consolidating, so buyers and sellers should talk to their
local REALTOR® to understand current and prospective trends in their local
housing market.”
Throughout most months in
2011, actual (not seasonally adjusted) national home sales were in line with
the 10-year average. November sales marked a break in that pattern, climbing
seven per cent above the 10 year average and reaching the fourth highest level
on record for the month.
“Toward the end of every year,
there’s a natural inclination to compare how momentum for national sales
activity and average price compare to the year before,” said Gregory Klump,
CREA’s Chief Economist. “National sales activity picked up late last year, and
November’s results suggest that a similar trend may be playing out again this
year. By contrast, national average price also picked up toward the end of last
year, whereas this year it has held steady after having peaked in the spring.”
“With interest rates expected
to remain low for longer, the housing sector will no doubt be closely watched
for signs of excess,” added Klump. “That said, current trends for resale
housing and new home construction suggest that tightened mortgage regulations
are working as intended and fostering economic stability in Canada.”
A total of 432,048 homes have
traded hands via Canadian MLS® Systems so far this year, up 2.1 per cent from
levels in the first 11 months of 2010. The year-to-date sales figure remains
broadly in line (+0.7 per cent) with the average for that period from 2001 to
2010.
Compared to October, the
number of newly listed homes fell 3.4 per cent in November. New listings
slipped lower in more than two-thirds of Canadian housing markets, with
Toronto, the Hamilton-Burlington region, and Calgary contributing most to the
national decline.
The national housing market
remains balanced, but is edging closer to seller’s market territory. The
national sales-to-new listings ratio, a measure of market balance, stood at
55.5 per cent in November, up from 53.4 per cent in October. This marks the
third month in which the national ratio has risen, and it now stands at its
highest reading since the spring.
Based on a sales-to-new
listings ratio of between 40 to 60 percent, just over half of local markets in
Canada were balanced in November, while a third of markets qualified as
sellers’ markets.
The number of months of
inventory nationally stood at six months at the end of November. It has held
steady at about this level since April, which is above levels posted during the
first quarter. The number of months of inventory represents the number of
months it would take to sell current inventories at the current rate of sales
activity, and is another measure of the balance between housing supply and
demand.
The actual (not seasonally
adjusted) national average price for homes sold in November 2011 stood at
$360,396. This represents a year-over-year increase of 4.6 per cent, its
smallest increase since January.
1
All figures in this release except average price are seasonally adjusted.
Removing normal seasonal variations enables meaningful analysis of monthly
changes and fundamental trends.