Archive for June, 2010

B.C. real estate prices set to dip, report says

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Derrick Penner and Garry Marr
Sun

Steve Lott and wife Jan Fricker (with Keegan Lott, 8) are confident they will be able to sell their home near Main Street in Vancouver for nearly $900,000 despite a CREA report that says prices will decline as much as 3.5 per cent through 2011. Photograph by: Ian Lindsay, PNG, Vancouver Sun

Steve Lott an Jan Fricker are hoping to sell their 2,400-square-foot home near Main Street for $899,000 despite a predicted price drop in B.C. real estate for next year. The couple bought the house nearly 15 years ago for $270,000.

Rising interest rates, changes to lending rules and declining affordability are forcing the Canadian Real Estate Association to lower price and sales forecasts across the country, but especially in B.C.

The continuing recovery of the local property market will taper off as the year continues, the association is now predicting, and will likely see prices decline by up to 3.5 per cent through 2011.

As well, the number of houses expected to sell will be off considerably over the next 18 months.

Despite an improving provincial economy and a swift rebound in real estate prices late last year, the numbers in recent months have disappointed analysts and has led to the surprising reversal of earlier forecasts for the local market.

But both buyers and sellers remain confident they can find what they are looking for, and pockets of active listings still exist.

B.C. saw some of the biggest post-recession rebounds in real estate markets, so a recent cooling of sales in the province is a big reason the Canadian Real Estate Association revised its national housing market forecast to reflect lower sales and an easing of prices.

CREA, in its revised forecast released Wednesday, estimated B.C. sales will decrease almost six per cent to 80,000 transactions this year, a dramatic shift from the 101,900 sales in its initial forecast released in February.

Average prices, CREA estimates, will edge up 2.3 per cent this year to $476,400 before slipping back 3.5 per cent in 2011.

Nationally, CREA expects 490,600 sales through its Multiple Listing Service this year, a 5.5 per cent jump from 2009 and the second-highest number on record, but substantially off the 527,300 transactions it anticipated in its February forecast.

In a statement, CREA noted the revision “reflects a weaker-than-expected start to the year” in B.C. and developments in the mortgage market that pushed purchasers to buy homes sooner rather than later.

“They changed their forecast based on how much things have slowed down very recently,” Tsur Somerville, a commerce professor at the University of B.C., said in an interview.

The pace of sales over the last few months has slowed compared with the end of 2009 while new listings of homes for sale have increased, said Somerville, director of the centre for real estate and urban economics in the Sauder School of Business at UBC.

Cameron Muir, chief economist for the B.C. Real Estate Association, said the B.C. picture is heavily influenced by the Lower Mainland and Victoria markets, which have seen prices rebound past their previous peaks.

Now, he said, they are also the markets where buyers are being squeezed out the most because they can’t afford to buy, which also affects demand.

“The economy is improving,” Muir said. “But that’s being counterbalanced by places like Vancouver where prices are quite high.”

Somerville added that new mortgage lending rules that have tightened the requirements for borrowers to qualify for mortgages are another factor that has combined to help slow sales.

Canadians buying homes with mortgage-default insurance must now qualify based on what is called the benchmark rate for a five-year fixed-rate closed mortgage, even if they opt for terms of under five years.

The impact has been that borderline borrowers get less cash for their homes because they must qualify based on a rate that is six per cent today.

Buyers going for terms five years or longer can qualify based on the rate on their contract, which is as low as 4.25 per cent for a five-year mortgage based on discounting.

The rules have forced many consumers out of variable-rate mortgages tied to the prime rate, which even after Tuesday’s Bank of Canada rate hike, stood at 2.5 per cent.

However, the net effect, Somerville said, is a market where “buyers expect they don’t have to hurry.”

“Instead of saying, ‘I’d better buy now because maybe prices will go up,’ it’s much more, ‘I don’t have to buy now and maybe prices will go down.'”

On that point, Muir said he believes B.C.’s prices will be firmer than CREA’s forecast, but it is “a question of: ‘Are prices up a couple of percentage points or down a couple of percentage points from where they stand now?'”

CREA now says the market peaked in the fourth quarter of 2009 and predicts that by next year, on a national basis, the average price of a home sold through the MLS will be $318,300, a 2.2 per cent decline from 2010.

“With interest rates soon expected to rise, Canada is widely believed to be entering a typical demand-driven downturn due to recent prices increases and rising interest rates,” CREA’s chief economist Gregory Klump said.

© Copyright (c) The Vancouver Sun

Housing prices, sales in decline

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

CREA points to interest-rate hike, new mortgage rules for expected drop

Province

Weaker-than-expected sales in B.C. have helped convince the Canadian Real Estate Association to lower its forecast for housing sales this year.

The Ottawa-based group — representing 100 real-estate boards across the country — says 2010 Canadian sales will not be as strong as previously forecast and that by next year prices will begin falling.

CREA expects 490,600 sales this year, a 5.5-per-cent jump from 2009 and the second-best year on record. By 2011, however, sales are expected to fall by 8.5 per cent.

A decline in housing affordability affected first-quarter sales in B.C., CREA said Wednesday.

“The revision reflects a weaker-than-expected start to the year in British Columbia, and recent developments that pulled forward the timing as to when sales are expected to ease in other provinces,” the association said.

A major factor pushing people into the market earlier has been new mortgage rules that took effect April 19.

Canadians buying homes with mortgage-default insurance must now qualify based on what is called the benchmark rate for a five-year fixed-rate closed mortgage, even if they opt for terms of under five years.

The impact has been that borderline borrowers get less cash for their homes because they must qualify based on a rate that is six per cent today. Consumers going for terms five years or longer can qualify based on the rate on their contract, which is as low as 4.25 per cent for a five-year mortgage based on discounting.

The rules have forced many consumers out of variable-rate mortgages tied to the prime rate.

“The changes prompted some homebuyers to finance their home purchase before the new regulations took effect in April, which pulled forward a number of sales that would have otherwise taken place at a later date,” said CREA.

With the Bank of Canada on Tuesday finally increasing its overnight-lending rate, which prime tracks, that too is expected to have an impact on home sales in the coming months.

CREA now says the market peaked in the fourth quarter of 2009 and predicts that by next year the average price of a home sold through the MLS will be $318,300, a 2.2-percent decline from 2010.

This year’s average price is now expected to be only 1.6 per cent higher than 2009.

Average price increases were previously forecast to rise 5.4 per cent in 2009, but the lower sales activity in B.C., which includes the country’s most expensive market in Vancouver, drove down the national numbers.

Only B.C. and Ontario are not expected to post price gains in 2011.

In B.C., prices should rise 2.3 per cent this year and fall by 3.5 per cent in 2011. Ontario will see prices climb 3.9 per cent in 2010 and fall 3.3 per cent in 2011.

Overall sales in B.C. are expected to fall 5.9 per cent this year and 10.6 per cent next.

© Copyright (c) The Province

B.C. leads pack for priciest property on the beach

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Paul Luke
Province

B.C. residents considering buying a recreational property are mainly motivated by a desire to improve their lifestyle, according to a new survey done for Royal LePage Real Estate Services.

Forty-nine per cent of potential purchasers in B.C. identify lifestyle as the chief reason they would buy recreational property, compared with the national average of 47 per cent, according to the survey released Monday.

Forty-four per cent of people in B.C. who are pondering the purchase of recreational real estate see it as a good investment, compared with 43 per cent nationally, the survey done by Angus Reid found.

In terms of coveted features, 53 per cent of potential buyers in B.C. place a priority on waterfront or beach access and 44 per cent prize four-season use.

Twelve per cent of potential B.C. buyers place great emphasis on buying property in an an ecofriendly region — the highest percentage in the country.

Recreational property in B.C. has the country’s highest average price range for a typical three-bedroom waterfront property with land access, the survey found.

B.C.’s recreational property ranges between an average of $345,000 and $1.5 million.

Ontario was second most expensive, with property averaging $140,000 to $1,050,000.

© Copyright (c) The Province