National Post

GTA home sales drop for fourth month

Housing prices rise again on short supply

- Ari altstedter

Toronto housing sales dropped for a fourth-straight month, but a shortage of available properties kept prices near the highs they reached earlier this year.

The number of homes sold in Canada’s largest metropolit­an area in July dropped two per cent on a seasonally-adjusted basis from June, bringing the number of sales to the lowest in at least a year, according to data released Thursday by the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. New listings plummeted more than 30 per cent from July 2020.

Prices still rose by 0.9 per cent in July from the month before, also on a seasonally-adjusted basis. The average price of a detached home sold during the month was $1.4 million.

Housing supply is also an issue in Canada’s other major cities. Vancouver’s real estate board said new listings in July were 12.3-percent

OWNERSHIP AND RENTAL MARKET CONDITIONS WILL REMAIN TIGHT.

below the 10-year average for the month, while the number of sales and properties on the market also declined in Montreal.

“Many households are still competing very hard to reach a deal on a home,” Jason Mercer, the Toronto real estate board’s chief market analyst, said in a press release accompanyi­ng its report. “This strong upward pressure on home prices will be sustained in the absence of more supply, especially as we see a resurgence in population growth moving into 2022.”

Some of the drivers of Canada’s housing boom over the past year are starting to disappear. Pandemic lockdowns that boosted demand for larger homes have been eased and some mortgage rates have ticked up. That’s causing real estate players to look to the traditiona­l driver of Canada’s housing market — immigratio­n-driven population growth — to resume and support prices over the long term.

“There is a huge backlog of people seeking citizenshi­p or permanent resident status in Canada,” John Dimichele, the Toronto real estate board’s chief executive, said in a statement.

“This means ownership and rental market conditions will remain tight with upward pressure on prices for the foreseeabl­e future. Policy-makers at all levels must pursue a co-ordinated effort to bring on a greater diversity of supply in major metropolit­an areas.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Housing supply is an issue in several of Canada’s major cities, including Toronto, above, where available homes
dropped more than 30 per cent last month from July 2020.
FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Housing supply is an issue in several of Canada’s major cities, including Toronto, above, where available homes dropped more than 30 per cent last month from July 2020.

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