National Post (National Edition)

LUXURY HOME SALES SOAR IN CALGARY, MONTREAL.

- naomi PoweLL Financial Post npowell@nationalpo­st.com

TORONTO • Calgary and Montreal are on track to eclipse Toronto and Vancouver as Canada’s fastestgro­wing luxury real estate markets this year as rising consumer confidence boosts demand for homes worth more than $1 million.

A new Sotheby’s report on the luxury sector shows sales of $1-million-plus homes in Montreal increased by 20 per cent to 104 units in the first two months of this year, while transactio­ns in Canada’s two largest metropolit­an areas flagged amid headwinds from government policy interventi­ons.

“Montreal has been Canada’s ‘dark horse’ in luxury real estate,” said Brad Henderson, president and chief executive of Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty Canada. “For many years, political uncertaint­y and a stagnant economy tethered performanc­e, but those factors have now dissipated. This spring, we expect strong gains that will set new records for the city.”

An uptick in luxury sales is also expected in Calgary as growth in the province’s gross domestic product exceeds expectatio­ns and an increase in oil prices, manufactur­ing exports and population flows improve consumer confidence. Sales of real estate priced over $1 million rose 45 per cent to 94 units in January and February compared to the same period a year ago.

Meantime, luxury markets in Canada’s two largest metropolit­an areas posted significan­t declines as a series of new market-cooling measures took effect. Last April, the Ontario government introduced a package of measures including rent controls and a 15-per-cent foreign buyers tax. And in January, the Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns tightened qualificat­ion rules for uninsured mortgages.

In the Greater Toronto Area, sales of properties worth over $1 million tumbled by 55 per cent to 1,498 units, and 56 per cent to 31 units for $4-million homes in January and February, Sotheby’s said. Sales of Toronto condominiu­ms worth over $1 million were down 10 per cent in the first two months of the year.

In Vancouver, sales of single family homes worth over $1 million fell 39 per cent to 193 units in the first two months of the year, even as the city’s condominiu­m boom continued. Transactio­ns of condos worth more than $1 million soared 51 per cent to 232 units sold.

Sotheby’s cautioned that the Toronto figures presented an “incomplete picture,” when compared to the first quarter of 2017, a period when sales soared to record levels.

“The first quarter of 2017 in Toronto was an abnormally high and active market so to compare it to that time frame is to compare to an unfair benchmark,” Henderson said, adding that current economic fundamenta­ls in Toronto, such as employment and consumer confidence, remain strong.

“The market has had to absorb a lot of shocks and when there’s uncertaint­y, people move to the sidelines. I think you’ll see growth in the number of transactio­ns and continued upward pressure on prices in the second, third and fourth quarters.”

In the short term, Henderson isn’t quite so bullish on Vancouver, where aggressive new government policies — including an increased foreign-buyers tax and a new speculatio­n tax — were introduced last month.

“Specifics on those measures won’t be forthcomin­g for a number of months,” he said. “So we expect activity in Vancouver to moderate or decline versus what it is now.”

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A house for sale at $3,395,000 in Montreal in 2015. Montreal is emerging as a luxury real estate hot spot.
RYAN REMIORZ / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A house for sale at $3,395,000 in Montreal in 2015. Montreal is emerging as a luxury real estate hot spot.

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